sighmoon
Well-Known Member
Seems to me most articles are written with only the positive and you have to guess the spaces.
That's not going to change - a bad review cost Yachting World £1.4m in a libel case.
Seems to me most articles are written with only the positive and you have to guess the spaces.
The reason I suggest it is a non-issue is that there have been very few cases of defective boats because of either a failure to meet the standards or the standards being inadequate. Individuals can huff and puff about things they see as not being right, but that is a long way from justifying change. There has to be clear evidence that wrongs are being done to generate enough political will to tackle whatever the problem is (or is seen to be).
This argument reminds me somewhat of the concern about the mismatch between fuel consumption figures fom the standard test and what is achieved in practice - the difference between stabilty calculated according to a formula in as designed conditions and how a boat behaves in use.
If there is a case for change then it must be based on a clear articulation of where the deficiencies lie (in the standard, in the methodology or the enforcement) - what the negative impact is and a firm proposal for improvement. At present all that seems to be apparent is some concern about deficiencies, but no clear articulation of the impact or new proposals.
I think you have to live in the real world - which for the European boat building business is survival at the moment.
For all the concerns from individuals about the inadequacies of the standards, I have yet to see any credible argument of harmful consequences or viable alternative. Seems to me that much of the argument is that modern boats are not like old boats and nobody makes boats like old boats anymore - which is hardly surprising because many old boats simply would not meet modern standards.
As to "truths" there are so many to choose from, which do you want? Like most people I suspect you would choose the ones that match your prejudices most closely!
As to "truths" there are so many to choose from, which do you want? Like most people I suspect you would choose the ones that match your prejudices most closely![/QUOTE
Blimey, an unlikely place to meet Marxist Philosophy.
You could be the first in your field. the Social Construction of Reality in the Yachtbuilding Industry. I am sure there is the makings of a PhD.
...For all the concerns from individuals about the inadequacies of the standards, I have yet to see any credible argument of harmful consequences or viable alternative. Seems to me that much of the argument is that modern boats are not like old boats and nobody makes boats like old boats anymore - which is hardly surprising because many old boats simply would not meet modern standards.
...!
As to "truths" there are so many to choose from, which do you want? Like most people I suspect you would choose the ones that match your prejudices most closely![/QUOTE
Blimey, an unlikely place to meet Marxist Philosophy.
You could be the first in your field. the Social Construction of Reality in the Yachtbuilding Industry. I am sure there is the makings of a PhD.
Yes, its all around us. Thats how most people manage to get through life in this complex, messy world! - or they just go down the pub!
Boats have been built to these standards for 12 or more years now (and many earlier boats were built to similar designs) and have been in operation all over the world. We have yet to see a rash of founderings because of lack of stability! Almost all losses of yachts through foundering are racing craft which do not have comply. And remember most of the Fastnet yachts were designed to the now discontinued IOR rules.OTOH, the RCD stability standards have yet to be real world tested en-masse with the equivalent of a Fastnet storm. When that day comes it won't be the Eurocrats who are drowned, unfortunately.
This is not about inadequacies of the standards. This is about inadequacies on the global criteria to generate stability curves that generate wrong assesments about a given boat.
This is about all stability curves not being made the same way (contrary of what happens to the ones needed to certify the same boat for ocean racing (ORC) - they don't accept the ones provided by the builders).
This is about this knowledge being public on the techinical levell and nobody doing anything to levell the play.
This is about misleading data that is given to the consumers, aggravated because not all manufacturers give misleading data and the ones that give similar information to the one that is obtained by the ORC methodology about the stability performance of their boats, have the consumers thinking their boats perform worse than the ones that offer pimped up performance. We are not talking about 2 or 3º, we are talking about a 10º diference on the AVS and that's huge, so huge that there would be a lot of boats that would not have been aproved as class A boats if the stability data was acessed using the ORC methodology that is the only one based on real inclining experiences with the boat on the water.
This is not about the inadequacies of the standards, this is about the right that the consumers have to have correct and significant data (obtained the same way for all) about the stability of the boat they are going to buy.
Regards
Manuel
First the ORC AVS, taken with an inclining experiment...
Also, I'd be really surprised if the mathematical models include all the stores and kit - and indeed crew - a boat going any distance will have on board ?
As ubergeekian and others will know, when a new aircraft comes along there are usually several development examples, one of which is literally tested to destruction, being subjected to physical loadings and stress to simulate the anticipated life of the aircraft.
To have some understanding as to why this happens perhaps you need to go back to basics. AVS is an artificial construct that is intended to represent a phenomenom that is dynamic and complex. It does not exist independently, but only as a calculation of the relationships among a number of variables. For convenience these measurements are turned into a single number for comparison. It has no other real meaning. It is clear, therefore that different methods of calculating a representation of something that is not in itself absolute will result in different outcomes. The numbers themselves will be PRECISE if the numerical manipulation is correct, but they will not necessarily be an ACCURATE representation of what you are trying to measure.
Let me specify:
red a divergence equal or superior to 8º, Brown, between 5 and 8, Green, 5 or less than 5.
First the ORC AVS, taken with an inclining experiment, last the AVS provider by the builder or the Designer and computer made)
X43 - 115,3 - 119, Arcona 43 -115,3 - 125; Elan 410 - 120,2 - 127; Elan 340 -116,8 - 132; Faurby 424 - 110,3 -118;; Dufour 40 - 109,9 - 122; First 36,7 - 113,3 - 126; First 40,7 - 114,6 - 126; First 44,7 - 107,6 - 130; Dehler 39 -117,6 -118; Hanse 430 - 115,4 -109;; Oceanis 423 - 110,5 -119; Oceanis 473 - 108,5 - 119; ; Swan 56 - 122,0 - 127; Sun Odyssey 49 - 110,1 - 120.
The data (AVS) was taken from the ORC international certificates (net) and from the RYA information on stability, from stability curves (provided by the manufacturers) published in magazines and from stability curves that the manufacturers display on their sites.
Regards
Manuel
Tranona,
I agree completely that if one were to come up with a simple figure - and the AVS may well be an example of this, even if all boats were tested to the same parameters; I think the whole point the OP was making is that they are not, so it is even more meaningless - it would be of little use.
If a figure was given, "this is an 8 rated boat" it would be useless to a potential buyer, maybe an agreed testing regime could provide a short report, ideally in a way that is intelligible to novice and seasoned veteran alike ?
An example of school / examiner types assuming no-one else has a brain while wishing to display theirs, again ?!