seeSimon
Well-Known Member
Sorry. Double post.
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Hereabouts (a small club fleet, with limited entry numbers, but multiple similar boats) , sadler 26/28 seem to do very well in tidal waters. With good helms they are hard to beat, boat_on_boat same tack upwind, even though my similarly sized lift keeler is rated much faster.A year on, is YTC working to encourage a wider range of people to take part in club cruiser racing and give any boat a chance of winning on their day, or do you need an optimum boat to have a chance in a biggish club regatta race - in which case what boat in the 26 to 32 foot range (£10-15,000 range) seems to perform best against its handicap in YTC
There's no universe where a Fulmar is slower than a CO32, assuming both rated for a kite and with normal sail areas etc.As for YTC, West Highland Week used it last year and compared the results against the previous CYCA system. There was strong correlation in the results except for Class 8 where a Fulmar was rated slower under YTC than a CO32 and won the class (sour grapes? - qui, moi?).
I have spent a small fortune over the years trying to ensure that my boat ,even if not the helmsman, is competitive with the front of the fleet, and I don't think that that is in the slightest morally dubious. You could make a case that the ethos of your club/class is not to try too hard but unless that is very explicit it's difficult to judge.All handicap systems have anomalies but I question the moral standards of anyone that buys and/or pimps a small cruiser with the sole aim of winning races. OD racing in some classes may be a bit of an arms race but there are still some with Corinthian mores.
As for YTC, West Highland Week used it last year and compared the results against the previous CYCA system. There was strong correlation in the results except for Class 8 where a Fulmar was rated slower under YTC than a CO32 and won the class (sour grapes? - qui, moi?). I'm glad to say both these boats (as were most of the class) were complete with the paraphenalia of cruising, feeding and sleeping their crews on board. One benefit for us was less silverware to store and then return for this season!
You misunderstand - just because the boats have creature comforts (and drink lockers) doesn't reduce the level of effort that the crews and skippers put into the racing. WHYW is peripatetic across 3 venues so leaving boxes on a pontoon doesn't work.I have spent a small fortune over the years trying to ensure that my boat ,even if not the helmsman, is competitive with the front of the fleet, and I don't think that that is in the slightest morally dubious. You could make a case that the ethos of your club/class is not to try too hard but unless that is very explicit it's difficult to judge.
Why should I give time to someone who sails a shed with a weedy bottom and bed sheets for sails. I have read of club's that have a £1000 Laser class where anyone has the right to buy your boat for £1000 thereby discouraging any tendency to an arms race, but there it is overt and explicit