Origin British AC entry

  • Thread starter Thread starter lyc
  • Start date Start date
Great news.

I hope they find enough funding to make a proper job of it.

Would be a tremdous boost to our boating industry.

I reckon they should ditch ACC boats and go for J class.
 
Best of luck to them. I hope they get the proper financial support they deserve, hopefully the big corporates will see the benefit in sponsoring this project. Remember the live prime time TV coverage Day Mellon got? Bet that did no harm at all to B&Q!
 
\"Proper boats\"

I don't understand the logic behind the current ACC boats.

The Deed of Gift was amended to allow a challenge in the 12 metre class because nobody could afford a bigger boat.

That is patently not true now, and races in the J class would provide far better spectator sport.
 
Re: \"Proper boats\"

And clearly the boats are built to exploit the rules as best they can.

But its not good at all for spectators and I doubt its particularly nice sailing.

I think a review of the rules is needed.

Much like the IOR boats of some years ago, the rules have forced designers to follow a path which leads to a flawed boat thats quick.

The VO boats and Open 60 etc have gone a similar way in the last decade or two, were left with wreckage around the oceans and uneccessary risks.

Short sighted rule makers.....
 
30 million a year is on a par with the budget of the top teams - it should be enough if he can get the right team
 
I'm all for it. The AC has brought tremendous progress in yacht design and technology. Who can forget the New Zealand development of the folding yacht? There have also been numerous models of the collapsible rig. I even recall exotic detachable keels (or was that the Open 60s?). I believe that there is work underway on the "rollproof" saloon, which enables the whole saloon to rotate as the boat inverts, so that life below can continue as normal whilst awaiting rescue. This of course is not within the ACC, as everyone knows they don't have accommodation, just winch farms.

Then we come to multihulls - the ability on trimarans to reduce wetted area by detaching a hull (although this seems to have lost favour recently); the ability to deal with bad weather by inverting to achieve maximum stability and a quiet heave-to. The list is endless.

The ingenuity of yacht designers just takes my breath away.

You can tell it's a wet Saturday morning here, when I should be doing something useful in the boatyard..
 
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