| Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: waterbug_wpb]
#102522 04/02/07 11:30 AM 04/02/07 11:30 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | I'll take a 45ft autoclave if they're throwing one out. That way I can make my own VX-40. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/smirk.gif" alt="" /> I'll check and get back with you...although I'm pretty sure they just make the fabric there. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: waterbug_wpb]
#102523 04/02/07 11:33 AM 04/02/07 11:33 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 465 FL sail7seas
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Posts: 465 FL | I wonder if the below would be applicable to 2007 prices?
>December 17, 2002 EU Imposes $83M in Fines for Price-Fixing
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - The European Commission on Tuesday fined 11 companies $83 million in two separate price-fixing scandals involving graphite and spices.
In the graphite cartel, eight companies were assessed a total of 60.6 million euro ($62.4 million)for violating EU competition rules between 1993 and 1998.
The Commission said that a two-year investigation found that the companies held regular meetings to divvy up the market and keep prices at inflated levels. Specialty graphites are used in everything from engineering to electronics.
Germany's SGL Carbon AG received the highest fine of 27.75 million euro ($28.57 million), while Japan's Toyo Tanso must pay 10.79 million euro ($11.11 million).
Other fines levied include 6.97 million euro ($7.18 million) for France's Carbon Lorraine SA, 6.97 million euro ($7.18 million) for Japan's Tokai Carbon Co., and 3.58 million euro ($3.69 million) for Ibiden Co. and Nippon Steel Chemical Co. also of Japan. Another two Japanese firms, Itech and Intech Inc. were fined 980,000 euro ($1 million).
SGL's fine was the highest ``because it was the ringleader,'' the Commission said, while the other companies got reductions in exchange for their cooperation in the probe. U.S.-based GraphTech International Ltd. was given immunity ``because it revealed the cartel,'' the Commission said. < | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: PTP]
#102524 04/04/07 06:32 AM 04/04/07 06:32 AM |
Joined: Nov 2005 Posts: 337 Victoria, Australia C2 Mike
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Posts: 337 Victoria, Australia | That price is about the running price for a new A by the time you add mast and sail. How is the A class so popular????????????? Obviously because it doesn't weigh #400 <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> Tiger Mike | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: C2 Mike]
#102525 04/04/07 07:19 AM 04/04/07 07:19 AM |
Joined: Aug 2002 Posts: 396 Annapolis Md. LuckyDuck
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Posts: 396 Annapolis Md. | How is the A class so popular????????????? -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Obviously because it doesn't weigh #400
It's true. Since I can launch and retrieve by myself I'm getting a lot of boat time. If I have 3 hours to spare on a weekday afternoon I can toss the boat in and have 2 hours of sailing. Do this twice a week and it's priceless. Still, $25k? Please don't think that all A Catters are this rich. Ed
Still hazey after all these beers. F-16 Falcon #212
| | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: fin.]
#102527 04/04/07 09:33 AM 04/04/07 09:33 AM |
Joined: Oct 2001 Posts: 395 LA Acat230
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Posts: 395 LA | When I was thinking about getting an A cat last year, one of the guys mentioned the possibility of a 200lb. class. The idea was to keep cost down and to keep the classes "home builder" roots.
Is that possibility still alive? No, that will not happen ever. The class has proven that the boat can be built at the 165 lb weight with durable and strong platforms. If anything, as technology gets better, you might see the next generation consistently weigh about 5 kilos (~10 lbs) less as many of the new boats are already sailing with 4-6 lbs of corrector weights. While the price of the Gel Tek is very expensive, US sailors seem to forget the excellent product that Matt McDonald is producing with the Vectorworks/Bim XJ. I recently delivered one for Charlie Ogeltree to sail this year. I let Don Brennan at DIVERSIFIED MARINE in Mobile take a look at it. Don is now the US SAILING team boatwright. He was extremely impressed with the boat and the finish. Matt is selling new boats with a sailaway price of less than $20K and has let some lightly used demos go for less than $17K. While still expensive, you have to look at what you think your usage versus expense ratio will be. A lot of us A-Catters justify paying the $$$ because it is so easy to get time on the water (lightweight, simple, one sailor) and there is no boat that will bring a grin to your face like an A-Class. Bob Hodges | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: Eric Anderson]
#102530 04/04/07 10:59 AM 04/04/07 10:59 AM |
Joined: Feb 2006 Posts: 3,348 fin.
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Posts: 3,348 | | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: fin.]
#102531 04/04/07 01:22 PM 04/04/07 01:22 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | The discussion in this thread is just to interesting to ignore ! Allow me to run by each point in chronological order When I was thinking about getting an A cat last year, one of the guys mentioned the possibility of a 200lb. class. The idea was to keep cost down and to keep the classes "home builder" roots.
Is that possibility still alive?
Yes, and it is called Formula 16. I think it would be possible to build a Ply hull with carbon beams and masts boat pretty close to 165 lbs.
But it will be not be as dependable and strong as the modern 26.000 bucks A-cats. 3 mm ply and skimming big time on the bulkheads is making these timber boats pretty sensitive. The difference between a 3 mm timber skin (A-cat) and a 4 mm skin (F16) is very significant. The latter will feel and be twice as stiff and resistant against damage from sideways loads. Second point is what we should be discussing is not purchase price, but yearly cost of ownership.... You only have one sail to buy and they last along time if you use an older sail for practice. New mains with battens run about 1500$ delivered. Compared to a spinnaker equipped boat the sail replacement costs are cheap and you get great sails.
What a BS ! I can get a fully rigged F16 for what ? 15.000 USD tops. The A-cat will be 20.000 that means I can replace my 1500 USD main twice and also have two 800 USD replacement spinnaker and still have 400 USD left in my pocket for a replacement jib before I reach the A-cat retail price with only 1 mainsail. Making almost 3 suits of sails again only 1 mainsail on the A. How much time will this cover, 10 years ? After 4 years of sailing I'm still on my first mainsail and spinnaker. And every class will "do a long time with a main if you are only using your old main for practice". That argument is not in anyway unique to the A-cat class. And of course only the A-cat boat get great sails delivered by sailmakers, the rest of us just have to make do with good or acceptable sails ! <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> Wouter
Last edited by Wouter; 04/04/07 01:26 PM.
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: Wouter]
#102532 04/04/07 10:20 PM 04/04/07 10:20 PM |
Joined: Nov 2003 Posts: 749 Santa Cruz, CA SurfCityRacing OP
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Posts: 749 Santa Cruz, CA | Isn't the diversity here awesome! Look at all the different boats we sail. I sail an FX-ONE and love it for what it is. I like to use the car analogy to try to understand why different sailors sail different boats. Some people like to drive Hondas. They get the job done. They start everytime, get good mileage, and are relatively inexpensive. I prefer to drive a Dodge Cummins. It's reliable, can tow a a lot of stuff and gets relatively good mileage. It's a bit more pricey than a Honda, but it suits my needs of owning Surf City Catamarans. Now there are some guys out there that want the best top of the line Ferrari. I don't judge them or tell them they should've bought the Honda. I just understand that that car suits their needs. Whatever their needs are. That's why people on a message board can opine all day long about what boat THEY think is the best and why. Meanwhile, people will be at my shop buying Hobie Bravos for their kids, Catalina 27's so they can go on a weekend trip to Monterey, Hobie 16's to race one design, and arguably the best A-class cats produced in the world The Gel-Tek Flyer 2. Isn't diversity great!
Last edited by SurfCity; 04/04/07 10:23 PM.
| | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: Wouter]
#102533 04/05/07 08:59 AM 04/05/07 08:59 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 160 Connecticut Eric Anderson
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Posts: 160 Connecticut | [color:"blue"] [/color] "Woot" “Don't let anybody convince you that the choice is limited to only two alternatives ! Question: Whats up with 400 pound boats and $ 26,000 A Cats ? How about a 240 lbs / $ 14.000 screamer ? Lightweight like an A,…..”
What a BS ! I can get a fully rigged F16 for what ? 15.000 USD tops. The A-cat will be 20.000 that means I can replace my 1500 USD main twice and also have two 800 USD replacement spinnaker and still have 400 USD left in my pocket for a replacement jib before I reach the A-cat retail price with only 1 mainsail. Making almost 3 suits of sails again only 1 mainsail on the A. How much time will this cover, 10 years ?
After 4 years of sailing I'm still on my first mainsail and spinnaker. And every class will "do a long time with a main if you are only using your old main for practice". That argument is not in anyway unique to the A-cat class.”
[color:"blue"] [/color] [color:"black"] [/color] First of all, comparing a 165 lb 18 ft long boat to a 16 ft 240 lb boat is somewhat absurd. That would be like saying you could get a 14 ft boat that only weighed 350 lbs and is light weight like a F16. Now if the F16’s weighed in at around 150 lbs, I might buy your light weight argument. Ditto the cost argument. If A cats were 50% heavier, they would be a lot cheaper also. Compare apples to oranges or it is meaningless. There is a huge difference in the feel and sailing characteristics of a 165 lb boat and a 240 lb boat. Same thing when you go from 240 lbs to 330lb Hobie 16+spinnaker,H17, (F17), Hobie FX-1, nacra 5.5 Uni. If you don’t appreciate the difference then don’t buy one. Think about this:
A class 165 lbs (lightest) 19,000$ (110% more) 2006 DPN 64.6 Fastest F-16 240 lbs (45% heavier) 15,000$ (66% more) 2006 DPN 67.1 (3.8% slower) H 16+spi320 lbs (94% heavier) 9,000$ (baseline) 2006 DPN 72.9 (13% slower)
H Wave+spi 250 lbs (51% heavier) 4,400$ (105% less) 2006 DPN 88 (36% slower)
It all kind of makes sense doesn’t it?
As far as sail costs go, maybe you have some incredible unobtanium sailcloth, but my personal experience with sails is as follows: Competitive lifespan of a Mainsail 60-75days, Jib 30 days, spinnaker 30 days. For me this worked out to a jib and spinnaker every year and a main every other year. I have owned catamaran sails by Goodall, Glaser, Ulman, Smyth, Shore, EP, and HobieCat. For ME personally, this worked out to be around 8-10 sails over the 4 years I own a boat. Now I am down to about 2 sails per 4 years. Your mileage may vary.
Sail fast, sail light Eric | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: Eric Anderson]
#102534 04/05/07 10:48 AM 04/05/07 10:48 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | First of all, comparing a 165 lb 18 ft long boat to a 16 ft 240 lb boat is somewhat absurd. ... Compare apples to oranges or it is meaningless. ...
When both boats reach the finish line at the same time then they are both "oranges" (or "apples", whatever you prefer). The rest of the argument is about which one does so more efficiently. 60-75 days per mainsail ? That would be 2 or 3 seasons in my book. 30 days for a jib may well have been true for the old overlapping kind made of dacron, but the selftackers seem to last alot longer in my opinion. Partly because they can now be made out of pentex too because there is no more flapping about etc. With respect to jib loads, I'm not seeing much degrading of the shape because of it. I honestly feel that the new jib setups are much more stable then the older ones. The spinnaker sail is most definately the one that ends it competitive life much sooner then the others, but then again they do last. So you trick to using only the old spi in basic training and the new one for racing will cut down on the related costs. But my basic point was ofcourse that all the savings one can make on the sails when one sails an A-cat are meaningless when just getting the boat itself will cost you many times more. That difference needs to be won back first before "cheap sails" will start to favour the A. A class 165 lbs (lightest) 19,000$ (110% more) 2006 DPN 64.6 Fastest F-16 240 lbs (45% heavier) 15,000$ (66% more) 2006 DPN 67.1 (3.8% slower) H 16+spi320 lbs (94% heavier) 9,000$ (baseline) 2006 DPN 72.9 (13% slower)
H Wave+spi 250 lbs (51% heavier) 4,400$ (105% less) 2006 DPN 88 (36% slower)
We all know that the F16 DPN is bogus. In the rest of the world we are sailing of the F18 handicap or just 1% away from it. ONLY US DPN thinks this needs to be 7% slower then the F18's. I'm not wasting anymore breath on that issue. Personally I can buy a new Hobie 16 with spi for about 14.500 Euro's, for the same price I can also get any of the F16's. I don't know why the Hobie 16's are so much more cheaper in the USA, but I know that they are. It all kind of makes sense doesn’t it?
Perfectly, like SurfCity said :"Isn't diversity great!" For ME personally, this worked out to be around 8-10 sails over the 4 years I own a boat.
I think having so many sails for one boat type is a little bit silly. Even if it is a sloop with spinnaker boat. This means that you had 3 suits of sails (mainsail, jib, spinnaker) in only 4 years of sailing. Why would you need 3 mainsails on this boat when you suddenly can make do with only 2 mainsails on the A-cat in the same timespan ? Do mainsails wear down quicker on a spinnaker boat ? By the same token a singlehanded F16 will not need any jibs and so we can strike those from the listing altogether. Personally I feel too many people concentrate too much on getting new sails and too little on getting their "old" sails to work well. Also I feel that 90 % of the sailors out there are not held back by having old sails but rather by having insufficient sailing skills. For them it will hardly make a difference if they buy a new suit of sail every 2 years. For truly competitive sailors getting new sails often is significant, but then again they need to buy a new boat every 3 years as well, did we included that in the calculation ? Now I'm not taking anything away from the A-cats with exception of some eyebrow raising claims. There is a huge difference in the feel and sailing characteristics of a 165 lb boat and a 240 lb boat.
Yes there is and it is not said that this is in favour of the 165 lbs boat and visa versa ! Different boats for different people and that is what you proved by your listing ones again. Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: SurfCityRacing]
#102535 04/05/07 08:46 PM 04/05/07 08:46 PM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 4,119 Northfield Mn Karl_Brogger
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Posts: 4,119 Northfield Mn | What kind of durability do these boats have when there are collisions? Fibre glass can break without much force. I'm just curious. I think I'd be real nervous that first couple of minutes in a crowded race with 25k under me.
Last edited by sogncab; 04/05/07 08:51 PM.
I'm boatless.
| | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: Karl_Brogger]
#102537 04/06/07 09:54 AM 04/06/07 09:54 AM |
Joined: Oct 2001 Posts: 395 LA Acat230
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Posts: 395 LA | What kind of durability do these boats have when there are collisions? Fibre glass can break without much force. I'm just curious. I think I'd be real nervous that first couple of minutes in a crowded race with 25k under me. I agree with Eric's previous post and while carbon is stronger and stiffer than fiberglass, it typically has less impact resistance. Most of the sailors entering the A-class are fairly experienced so it's rare that we see collisions (but they do happen). At the last Midwinters with over 50 boats, there were no incidents at all but at our last Gulfport regatta, a new sailor let his boat get away from him and there was minor damage to his and another boat (but they were both sailing the next day). In all honesty, I'm more vigilant at larger open class regattas because the experience level is not as high (typically more novice sailors) and we have to keep an eye on the spinnaker boats because their ability to keep clear and see everything downwind is more limited than our boats. Bob Hodges | | | Re: Surf City Catamarans and A-Class Cats
[Re: Eric Anderson]
#102538 04/06/07 12:12 PM 04/06/07 12:12 PM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 4,119 Northfield Mn Karl_Brogger
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Posts: 4,119 Northfield Mn | Lake City doesn't have a ton to offer. It's a small town. But the lake is the best sailing in the area w/out having to drive 3-4hrs. Its about 40 min from my house so I'm down there semi-frequently.
I don't think I'd deserve an A-Cat. I'd bounce it off of someone and end up with a real mess.
I'm boatless.
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