lustyd
Well-Known Member
To bring consistency and predictability to bear when a risk of collision exists.
Of course there are the occasional "hard cases" when the situation is confused, but they are relatively rare, although I concede that they may be more common in the Solent, which is crowded tends to attract more "occasional" sailors than other places. I agree with Tim Bartlett. In practice, the regulations are not hard to apply and the default position is clear - apply them.
I agree too when a genuine collision situation exists. The problem is that some people apply them far too early, and some people apply them far too often. For example, when two boats are in open water, one on a bearing of 0 and the other 180 you only need to turn to starboard if they are directly in front of you. I quite often find people cutting accross my bows (causing a colision situation) in order to pass port to port. This has happenned when there would have been several cables between us had we simply both held our course.