| Re: Oh well...
[Re: Jake]
#29092 02/08/04 11:20 PM 02/08/04 11:20 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California John Williams OP
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Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California | Hey Jake - Sure, I'm allowed to have the 'chute, just not the main or jib... or vice versa. The 160 sq. ft. limit leaves me with way too much or way too little. My existing jib is as high up the mast as I can go, so I can't rob a 5.5 without adding a longer forestay and a new hound higher up the mast. Then, with the new jib, I'd need a barberhauler, 'cause my jib blocks are fixed on the front beam. I'd better add a boom, too, if I expect to keep up... Too much drilling and riveting on a perfectly good design already. Might as well get another boat. My feedback on the draft rule was more sail area and no minimum weight, or a formula to reduce corrector crew weight if you exceed boat weight. I'll be watching, too - it's a good idea, even if I can't play.
John Williams
- The harder you practice, the luckier you get - Gary Player, pro golfer
After watching Lionel Messi play, I realize I need to sail harder.
| | | Re: -14 &15 classification
[Re: BRoberts]
#29094 02/09/04 06:31 AM 02/09/04 06:31 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe |
>>That 150 pound class minimum weight is a scaled down all carbon A class boat that costs $15,000.00 US Dollars. What these posts are talking about is a $1500 dollar boat finished and ready to go racing
Try tortured 3 mm and 4 mm marine ply. Gets you easily to 160 lbs on a 14 footer and costs less than a glass boat as well (lets alone carbon). There will be no 1500 US boats as sails mast and block will cost more than that.
Let we not forget that torture ply boats of low weight are already build by many sailors. Think paper tiger, arrow and sorts.
Besides Carbon is not more expensive than glass; major cost is the labour anyway.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: -14 &15 classification
[Re: fuzzy]
#29095 02/09/04 06:34 AM 02/09/04 06:34 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe |
240 lbs (108 kg) for the boat ?
Okay; than the Australians are out as well. No way they are going to build or design a 14 foot boat that weigths 240 lbs or more.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: -14 &15 classification
[Re: BRoberts]
#29096 02/09/04 07:04 AM 02/09/04 07:04 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 953 Western Australia Stewart
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Posts: 953 Western Australia | That 150 pound class minimum weight is a scaled down all carbon A class boat that costs $15,000.00 US Dollars. What these posts are talking about is a $1500 dollar boat finished and ready to go racing. Bill, have you looked at how light a high quality builder can make a strong light boat without being all carbon.. AHCP can and does build foam and glass "A"s under the weight limit.. Now I may agree with you no US manufacturer can build to there standards.. But I can assure you a aussie home builder can and do build light ply boats.. | | | Re: -14 &15 classification
[Re: Stewart]
#29097 02/09/04 08:05 AM 02/09/04 08:05 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 1,449 phill
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Posts: 1,449 | Stewart, I'm probably telling you what you already know but the Glass/foam Paper Tigers come in at min weight without the use of carbon. That is complete platform weighing 50kg. Ready to race would be around 70kg.= around 150lb
A couple of years back all carbon/kevlar platform cost $4,500 Aus . That may have gone up a bit but still a finished boat would be nothing like $15,000 US.
Hell, I've got a Paper Tiger mould and there is 4.5sq metres of surface area per hull. Anyone out there wanting a $15,000US PT should give me a call. But it may be in their interest to do the numbers first.
I know that the voices in my head aint real, but they have some pretty good ideas. There is no such thing as a quick fix and I've never had free lunch!
| | | NEW F14 Rules!
[Re: phill]
#29098 02/09/04 10:56 AM 02/09/04 10:56 AM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 744 Bob_Curry
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Posts: 744 | Hey guys! New rules on the F14 forum up for debate! We did listen to you and have reacted. Have fun! Bob Curry
"The election is over, the talking is done, Your party lost, my party won. So let us be friends, let arguments pass, I’ll hug my elephant, you kiss you’re a $$.” Liberalism = A brain eating amoeba & a failed political ideology of the 20th century!
| | | Re: NEW F14 Rules!
[Re: Bob_Curry]
#29100 02/09/04 11:50 AM 02/09/04 11:50 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 612 Cape Town, South Africa Steve_Kwiksilver
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Posts: 612 Cape Town, South Africa | Why not make it "open season" regarding design, weight, sail area, beam etc, but limit it to having an ISAF / pn number that is equal or within a very small tolerance. That way, a H14 sailor can chuck on big sails to compensate for being heavy, while it makes no sense to build an all-carbon boat down to very light weight, since all that means is a penalty in smaller sail area to bring the ISAf / PN number to within the tolerance. I like the "14ft X 14ft x 196sqf" rule proposed by someone earlier. WHo says it should only have 2 hulls ? Or that it can`t be 1 ? Just keep the numbers equal. That would be a REAL development formula class. Existing platforms could add racks if the 14ft beam proves to work. Quickly detachable for easy towing etc. Make it the tinkerer`s class !
Oh, and hydrofoils too, please.
Cheers STeve | | | Re: NEW F14 Rules!
[Re: Steve_Kwiksilver]
#29103 02/09/04 11:58 AM 02/09/04 11:58 AM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL Sycho15
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Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL | If we were striving to keep the boats within a certain PN number, nobody would ever bother building a faster boat! True formula racing says "Within these guidelines, all boats are considered equal. First across the finish line wins." As stated before, I'd rather sail Portsmouth and sail fast, than build a boat that already has it speed limited by ratings or weight. Under the current rules (which are still subject to change), a H14 owner can switch to H16 beams and mast, trapeze rack, and toss on a huge headsail to try and beat out the rest. There is a point where beam becomes excessive and the leeward hull is no longer able to support the loads placed on it. The 18sq. class found that 12' was about ideal for their length and sail-area.
G-Cat 5.7M #583 (sail # currently 100) in Bradenton, FL
Hobie 14T
| | | Re: Hey!
[Re: John Williams]
#29104 02/09/04 12:11 PM 02/09/04 12:11 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Excellent! The things that would inspire me for this class are as follows:
a) I can feasably build one in my (future) garage. b) I want a boat with too much sail area - but on a boat that's small enough that it won't kill me.
This one is definitly on my to-do list ... right after I build my garage and get my RX-7 restored.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: NEW F14 Rules!
[Re: Sycho15]
#29105 02/09/04 12:14 PM 02/09/04 12:14 PM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 612 Cape Town, South Africa Steve_Kwiksilver
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Posts: 612 Cape Town, South Africa | Hi Sycho,
My intent was based on the other formula classes, but instead of limiting all aspects of design as they do, so that all boats end up being very similar & then have the same iSAF rating, let builders experiment with very open rules, but govern the development within EQUAL perormance rating, so everyone can build / put together what they think works or fits their budget, but they have the same performance as the next guy, so it`s like open class married to one-design. It acchieves the same thing as Formula classes (boats of similar PERFORMANCE racing against eachother.) The more traditional approach is to limit all aspects of the boat`s design, then all boats end up looking exactly alike, and in the end everyone migrates to the fastest type of boat in the class, much as has happened in F18 where most serious guys get Hobie Tigers. Full circle, we all go one-design racing all over again. I thought this class would be where guys could play with their ideas. Pegging a ISAF / PN number just controls cost.
Cheers Steve | | | Re: -14 &15 classification
[Re: Stewart]
#29109 02/09/04 03:02 PM 02/09/04 03:02 PM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL TheoA
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Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL | But please dont tell me that it would take $15,000 to build a light fast 14 foot boat.. It might if you add all the hours of labor in R&D, and then mark the product up to make a living. I'm sure it would be way more than that if the company only made a handful of boats. Which is what I like so much about this new class idea. It seems to favor homebuilders greatly at this point. Are there some books you would recommend Bill that would be good for someone such as myself who wants to build a strong and light boat themselves?
94 N5.5SL
| | | Should be asking Phill on this..
[Re: TheoA]
#29111 02/09/04 11:00 PM 02/09/04 11:00 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 953 Western Australia Stewart
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Posts: 953 Western Australia | Phill on this list may be better to reply as he has just co-designed the "Blade".. For a light platform one below the proposed class spec.. You have two paths.. 1) Tortured ply.. As Carl suggested check out "Gougeon Brothers on Boat Construction".. Also study the Tiapan 4.9 web site especially their tips for home building.. Dont forget Phill's home page.. Ply Tiapans when well built are very competative.. As Bill stated in a previous post Members of my sailing club in WPB, Fla. built Paper Tigers 20 years ago. They are an ecxellent design and very fast for their size. Yet they were designed 3-4 decades ago.. Hell they arent even tortured ply but stitch and glue chined ply design.. Yet as Phill also stated they are built to under 150 lb.. 2)composite.. Check out the UK Cherub website (male mold) and Javelins.org and their Virtual Javelin project.. Not sure but also look up the International Moth web sites (The Aussie one used to have building tips).. Yes some Moths are still built in ply.. With perhaps a weight inrease from 10 kg up 17 kg hull weight.. I know of a home built International 14 that was built over a winter by three guys.. Working every second weekend.. 1 cm foam over a male mold.. 200 gm twill carbon outer skin with a second layer around the plate (knee damage when righting).. Inner skin was 100 gm twill.. The false deck was similar but the whole upper skin was 2X 200 gm and a mate layer.. With a complicated (and heavy) system to rake the centreplate from the trap.. All fittings ect.. It was 10 Kg under the class limit.. | | |
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