lustyd
Well-Known Member
I’m not sure why you’re arguing here. It’s clear what I meant and you’re imagining I said something else. Perhaps you need to get out sailing.
Explain where it says that. See Rule 10.In TSS you’re specifically required to not change course when crossing. It can take a long time to cross both lanes, during which ships you didn’t see when you entered will come and go. We would have happily changed course and I told the ship as much, however there were three other ships approaching which would have become collision potentials had we (illegally) changed course.
Breaking the colregs isn’t a sensible course of action at all and could very well end with action against you as the skipper.
You’re saying that a yacht under sail crosses fastest with a heading at right angles to the lane then? If so, you’ve just changed yacht racing quite drastically, I can’t believe they never thought of just changing their heading to the mark.Explain where it says that. See Rule 10.
Crossing a scheme at frght angles to the traffic flow gets across the vessels quicker, not the scheme itself.
I haven't changed anything at all. I specifically stated that crossing traffic at right angles to the traffic, not the scheme.You’re saying that a yacht under sail crosses fastest with a heading at right angles to the lane then? If so, you’ve just changed yacht racing quite drastically, I can’t believe they never thought of just changing their heading to the mark.
My yacht doesn’t and neither has any yacht I’ve sailed unless I get lucky with the wind.
My mention of racing was to make the point that setting your heading to the next mark only works in motorboats because yachts often get there faster on other headings it’s why we tack and gybe. I can’t believe it’s even a discussion here.I’ve never raced through them, that must be tricky.
A few at Datchet waterMy mention of racing was to make the point that setting your heading to the next mark only works in motorboats because yachts often get there faster on other headings it’s why we tack and gybe. I can’t believe it’s even a discussion here.
How many races have you won by aiming straight at each mark?
Many races now have the TSS defined as exclusion zones to avoid issues of people bending the rules for advantage over more honest competitors.A few at Datchet waterIn the Solent and south coast, none, as you know. Sailing a boat like the XOD, tidal tactics are sometimes extreme. The channel TSS, does the tide ever exceed 2kn? And it’s pretty much 6.5 hours each way, in line with the big traffic. So tidally, you’d go straight across. Racing, if the rhumb line crosses it diagonally, you’ve got yourself a problem. The Fastnet boats must do that. Someone here is bound to have done it.
And again, the fastest way across is almost always at 90 degrees heading. Unless it’s dead downwind. If it’s dead upwind, it seems we should motor.Again though, I wasn’t talking about racing across a TSS. In a race you have to get to the next mark or the finish, and the fastest way to get there is almost never setting a heading directly to it. The old joke about heading for anywhere but the destination applied here.
So when racing you do set your heading directly at each mark in turn? I’ve never seen that as a tactic, but I guess if it’s the fastest way it’ll catch on. Probably makes polars a bit pointless.And again, the fastest way across is almost always at 90 degrees heading.
The tide is at 90 degrees to you, in alignment with the TSS. The fastest way across is straight across the tide, unless tacking upwind or down. And that is discouraged. When swimming across a river, what do you do? I much prefer the quickest way.So when racing you do set your heading directly at each mark in turn? I’ve never seen that as a tactic, but I guess if it’s the fastest way it’ll catch on. Probably makes polars a bit pointless.
It isn’t always. In fact quite often isn’t.The tide is at 90 degrees to you
Swimming speed isn’t affected by point of sail though so not really relevant.When swimming across a river
In racing there is. Which is what I was talking about. Nothing to do with TSS, all to do with fastest way to get somewhere in an arbitrary direction. If the fastest way to get anywhere was to point the bow at it then sailors are doing a lot of stuff wrong!There is no mark
I was under the impression we were still talking TSS, I seem to remember writing it in every post. Rather obviously, it can be absolutely anywhere when you’re racing round the cans. Why that is in any way relevant here is beyond me. The thread had got as far as racing through the TSS. Why that, I don’t know. If you want to discuss racing round the cans in strong tide, yes, in the summer I do that one day in 2. In a slow boat, mostly.It isn’t always. In fact quite often isn’t.
Swimming speed isn’t affected by point of sail though so not really relevant.
In racing there is. Which is what I was talking about. Nothing to do with TSS, all to do with fastest way to get somewhere in an arbitrary direction. If the fastest way to get anywhere was to point the bow at it then sailors are doing a lot of stuff wrong!
I put that in pretty much every post too. Anyway, apparently conversation isn’t allowed and I have nothing to add on dinghy towing soWhy that is in any way relevant here is beyond me
I don't think you are getting this......It doesn’t though. The heading which moves the yacht fastest across the lane would also clear the vessels faster. The rule is heading, not course, and that will often be slower to cross the path of vessels.
I get it just fine, you all seem to drive motorboats. Anyway need to stop now it’s upsetting pmartinI don't think you are getting this......
never rely solely on your VHF to avoid a collision, you may have misunderstood, they may have misunderstood, you may have identified the wrong vessel, they may have identified the wrong vessel.
AIS in combination with DSC makes it less likely that you call the wrong vessel or the wrong vessel replies (assuming of course that you correctly match what you see to what the AIS displays and don’t have any fat finger moments - which in a busy TSS *might* be higher risk than calling the wrong name). It doesn’t prevent any of the other potential opportunities for confusion.AIS makes that very unlikely.
Good - I’d suggest it’s still not “zero danger”.In our case we watched them change course immediately so zero danger.
I’m not telling you that you shouldn’t - I wasn’t there and as you have provided minimal detail couldn’t say what I would or would not have done, although I wouldn’t have asked a vessel following a TSS what its intentions were, as that seems fairly obvious, I might have called them to tell them my intentions (most likely to change speed and or course so as not to impede them).In the same situation I’d do the same again