Mini Class / Class 6 rules

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Gizmo
Gizmo
SA
2865 posts
SA, 2865 posts
23 May 2009 7:53am
The previous thread has gone all over the place a bit...
Now onto the original subject......


kiwi307 said...

When I started this thread I asked about Class 6. Thread subsequently hi-jacked a bit.
However, in the body of this thread we are told to "forget class 6 it's a thing of the past". Seemed like it came from someone official. Then the Mini rules appeared and my reading was that this was the "official status".
Then I read the event notice for Nationals 2010 which I am considering, and guess what????
Class 6 rules apply.
Confused?
Yu betcha!


My thoughts are if you were to build a yacht you may need to consider both sets of rules which are actually not much different.


Gizmo said...

My thoughts on the size in my design book at the moment is a LLMini size chassis, which would fit into Mini3 with a small sail or Mini2 with a larger sail.
At least this size you are equal to the blokart, and "Landyacht" and "cisco" need some rivalry from SA.
I couldn't see much point in building a Mini of similar size to a class5, If you wanted a yacht that size for racing at least class 5 has got the the numbers.



And with a few days further on, my thoughts are still the same... if you wanted a "small" landyacht, I think the ideal size would be the dimentions of the LLMini which are the same as the blokart which fits the chassis both C6 and M3

Which are....
MAXIMUM LENGTH (WHEEL CENTRES) 1640mm
MAXIMUM WIDTH(OVERALL) 1510mm
Yacht must have an effective seat belt which must be worn correctly when sailing.
Yacht should have a brake.

The yacht would then be able to be sailed as M3 with a 4sqm sail or M2 with a 5sqm sail or M1 with a 6sqm sail.
I would much prefer a yacht size that fits all, kids , wife and yourself.(and Great for NEW people into the sport)
And another reason you can have a good old have a go at a blokart when it comes along as well

Why anyone would want a yacht as a straight M2 or M1 is beyond me as you would be limiting yourself and the yachts use, (way to powerful for car parks or kids) They are virtually the same size as class5 which has better racing.


kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
23 May 2009 7:45am
Hi Gizmo, good to bring this over to a new thread.
I agree about your logic. Personally I can't see why the other classes of Mini (M2 or more particulalry M1)are there, must be to allow for a commercial design which does not compete with a 5. Perhaps Manta? If that's the reaon, that's great to keep them in the sport, but why not say so?
The weights on the rule look very strange. In some cases Clem could run around with only a rig, and still make the minimum. I could not get close to the posted minimums, so as a 55percentile male you can't achieve that (even if you wanted)
I reckon it would be good to have a rule which said;
"Any sailor shall use the same configuration of yacht for the complete event. ie ballast and sail area shall be the same as used in the first race of any event".
My reasonings are;
It takes away the desire to have a quiver of sails.
Allows the heavier sailor to have a chance on "his" day. A very light sailor can run light on light wind, and then ballast on heavy, the heavy guy/gal can't do this.

And sorry, for those who will leap in, it's not a safety issue at all. Choose what you think the event might bring, and if it blows too hard for you to "be safe", don't sail!
Gizmo
Gizmo
SA
2865 posts
SA, 2865 posts
23 May 2009 10:23am
Your right, the weight limits do seem a bit odd in the scheme of things.
I'm not worring about weight limits i'm over the top weight with a rolled up sail under my arm let alone with a yacht.
Promo girl
Promo girl
259 posts
259 posts
23 May 2009 3:01pm
[The weights on the rule look very strange. In some cases Clem could run around with only a rig, and still make the minimum. I could not get close to the posted minimums, so as a 55percentile male you can't achieve that (even if you wanted)
I reckon it would be good to have a rule which said;
"Any sailor shall use the same configuration of yacht for the complete event. ie ballast and sail area shall be the same as used in the first race of any event".
My reasonings are;
It takes away the desire to have a quiver of sails.
Allows the heavier sailor to have a chance on "his" day. A very light sailor can run light on light wind, and then ballast on heavy, the heavy guy/gal can't do this.

And sorry, for those who will leap in, it's not a safety issue at all. Choose what you think the event might bring, and if it blows too hard for you to "be safe", don't sail!


Hi Rhys
I can sort of follow you reasoning but don't agree with you. As a light weight sailor being able to have the option of dropping to a smaller sail and/or adding ballast has allowed me to continue to compete on strong wind days during a regatta safely. If this option was removed I would be faced with two options keep on the big rig and possibly not have as good control of the yacht or withdraw from the comp. Now if I have spent lots of money getting to the comp how attractive do you think the 2nd option is? Whilst we should all put safety first in the heat of the moment how many people with think.. nah I will leave the big rig on I should be ok?

Now a light weight sailor with high level sailing ability may be able to manage the full sail in strong winds but what about average people like me? Would this make regattas only the grounds of the very elite? How does the average person get experaince to become elite if they can not compete?

For the record in Rada Tilly I raced with 5.5m most of the time, I did drop to a smaller sail at times and retired from the racing when the wind got so strong it was beyond my ability to compete safely. Having the option of being able to add ballast and use a smaller sail made the sailing I did do safer for me and those around me. It was not an easy decision to pull out of something I spent 2 years saving up to attend.

Are the bigger heavier guys really disadvantaged in some way as they can not shed wieght in light wind races? especially when you consider most of the times regattas have a minimum wind strength required before the start of a race??

Susan
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
24 May 2009 5:33am
Hi Susan,
I am not going to include your quote, most people can read it.
I know you have been at events where the low wind aspect has indeed been a problem (cos we were both there). There is very often pressure on organisers to get the races going in the very light. Many times if there is a lower windspeed limit it gets forced, either for the sake of a result, or from pressure from the lighter sailors. They, in my experience , jump in their yacht and then sail round, where ever they can, ie not on the race course, and then come back and tell the race organisers that there is enough wind.
As you know, it's a completely different thing to sail one or two yachts where ever you want, to having a race with a large number. I got into landyachting for a lot of reasons, running was not one of them! Light winds, heavier pilots = more pushing! Light winds , light pilots = less pushing.
Either the organisers need to be stronger in their application of speed (Euro 4m/sec) over the whole course, or something else needs to be in place. You sailed in 86, nobody had extra sails, we had huge wind variations, and everybody was able to sail safely. What has changed? Peoples aspirations and the budgets they throw at it? Are there more sailors? (last one was a rhetorical question)
Perhaps 1 sail is too strict. I do know that even the 12' and 18' skiffs have a rig restriction, why could not this sport? Makes it cheaper!
Hiko
Hiko
1229 posts
1229 posts
24 May 2009 7:41am
I have been reading this thread with some interest It seems to me that from a competitive point of view and humans seem to always want to compete no matter what the sport there are three factors determining consistant success in landyachting The yacht the pilots ability and the pilots weight
The first two can be altered the last can not
I have no experience of landyachting in Australia but especially with your no pushing rule I would be surprised if there were any heavy consistant champion sailors The odds are stacked against them I believe blokarts have weight classes There would be a very good reason for this In water sailing the ballast [ the sailor ] is movable and the extra weight can be used to advantage at times not so landyachts
So I would think that if the racing wants to be all inclusive of body type then this factor needs to be addressed some how
I dont know of any heavy jockeys --- similar situation
Promo girl
Promo girl
259 posts
259 posts
24 May 2009 10:28am
Your right Rhys about organisers being under pressure to run events in light winds. Yes this happens. I also have no desire to be involved in running races round a course when the only winner is the person with the greatest stamina to keep pushing the yacht/sailing in puffs of wind.

The things that has changed since 86 (apart from us all being 20+ years older) is that I experinaced the winds at Rada Tilly which were so much bigger than anything we experinaced in Lytham. Plus the yachts are now faster and the sails bigger. In 86 we were racing with 5m2 sails now 5.5m2 is the go.

Perhaps the solution is a compromise - strict enforecment of the min wind conditions and only two sails - not the quiver.

In Rada Tilly they did provide the promo pilots who rented yachts with two sails a 5.5 and a 4.5.

Interesting discussion.
Susan
Clemco
Clemco
430 posts
430 posts
24 May 2009 10:47am
There's not much room on a mini yacht for ballast. Also different yachts will have different overall weights. Who is going to be bothered weighing everyone and there yachts before you go sailing? Christ, it's not the Olympics! this Mini class is just for having fun is it not?
Promo girl
Promo girl
259 posts
259 posts
24 May 2009 10:54am
ummm Clemco... Rhys and I were talking about class 5 and international racing where yes they do a times wiegh yacht and pilot. Sorry if this discussion took an off shoot from the topic - we were not discussing mini's at all
Susan
Gizmo
Gizmo
SA
2865 posts
SA, 2865 posts
24 May 2009 12:30pm
Aren't weight specs part of the "New" mini rules? thats how this thread started.
Promo girl
Promo girl
259 posts
259 posts
24 May 2009 11:06am
yes Gizmo your right however both Rhys and I were discussing experainces in class 5 with regards to this question. As to if these experiances transfer across to the smaller mini... I don't know?

As I said interesting discussion
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
24 May 2009 1:39pm
Yes the thread has gone off a bit! But so have all the others!!!!
86 wasn't Lytham Susan it was 90 Mile!
There have been numerous regattas where wind lower limits have been more than pushed. I thought it was Lytham when you were there that racing was cancelled for the day for very high winds?? Possibly one of the dozens of others I was at though. Do many of the Euro pilots use multiple sails? Certainly not at the Smirnoff international. Batten changes yes, but I did not see sail changes. Area is needed lots of times for the hundreds of tacks needed to claw up a Euro beach.
Yes the sails are now "nominally" 5.5 just as the old ones were nominally 5. The change of rule was to actually reflect what was being used, and at the time there was a change in the way they were measured.
Faster, I would damned well hope so, the cost has gone through the roof. Bill and I had a discussion about this at his 50th, and we both have a common thought about this. Bill and I agreeing totally, now that's a bit rare!
Weight, I will own up to 90 ish, Clem will you fess up
Hiko
Hiko
1229 posts
1229 posts
24 May 2009 2:01pm
Clemco said...

There's not much room on a mini yacht for ballast. Also different yachts will have different overall weights. Who is going to be bothered weighing everyone and there yachts before you go sailing? Christ, it's not the Olympics! this Mini class is just for having fun is it not?



Certainly is for me but is it for everyone ?
Clemco
Clemco
430 posts
430 posts
24 May 2009 2:18pm
Maybe this "Mini" class is not for the fattys. Afterall you dont see many 90kg guys racing in MotoGP do you .
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
24 May 2009 2:26pm
Aha so you not going to fess Clem????
BTW 90kg is actaully the 55% male, so don't call me a fatty you runt!
Hiko
Hiko
1229 posts
1229 posts
24 May 2009 5:07pm
crikey you are only 90 kg ? no hope for me then
Clemco
Clemco
430 posts
430 posts
24 May 2009 5:28pm
Sorry about the "fatty" comment. It was not made to offend anyone. It was suposed to be a constructive comment. I mean we are only building these little yachts to get kids into our sport and to have a bit of fun ourselves along the way.
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
24 May 2009 5:51pm
Clemco said...

Sorry about the "fatty" comment. It was not made to offend anyone. It was suposed to be a constructive comment. I mean we are only building these little yachts to get kids into our sport and to have a bit of fun ourselves along the way.


No offence taken Clem, all taken in light heart as long as you don't mind being a runt, I can live with being a fatty!
Why am I not doing yet another 5? For me, too much capital tied up for too little sailing, no one else to go and play with, so a Kiwi Mini will do. The kid is now grown up and involved with aero design of full size race cars and aiming for Post Grad with Le Mans cars, so too late for a kids yacht here! (Perhaps something has rubbed off here?)
What about you Clem, why?
Promo girl
Promo girl
259 posts
259 posts
24 May 2009 6:33pm
YOur right Rhys getting the years muddled. I did not get to 90 mile in 86, Paul did of course. I was thinking 87 in Lytham. I do rememberone high wind day but was down with gastro so did not race that day anyway. Gosh was it really that long ago?
Test pilot 1
Test pilot 1
WA
1430 posts
WA, 1430 posts
24 May 2009 7:34pm
i have done 110 kph gps verified(ask landyacht) in the first model of a lake lefroy mini and i only weigh a petite 120kg
22 8/12/2007 12:32:28 934 ft 0.2 mi 0:00:13 68 mph 267° true S31 21.828 E121 38.016
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
25 May 2009 3:50am
Test pilot 1 said...

i have done 110 kph gps verified(ask landyacht) in the first model of a lake lefroy mini and i only weigh a petite 120kg
22 8/12/2007 12:32:28 934 ft 0.2 mi 0:00:13 68 mph 267° true S31 21.828 E121 38.016



Yep, great, but what do you do when the 60kg guys are zooming round in 4 knots of breeze? They can then ballast up for the heavy, we can't "unballast" for the light!
Test pilot 1
Test pilot 1
WA
1430 posts
WA, 1430 posts
25 May 2009 8:21pm
get some exercise and push. Failing that i get out my pocket trumpet and blow up some wind of my own, If that fails , I just lay back and catch some zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz's
Arjay
Arjay
VIC
267 posts
VIC, 267 posts
25 May 2009 11:59pm
Test pilot 1 said...

get some exercise and push. Failing that i get out my pocket trumpet and blow up some wind of my own, If that fails , I just lay back and catch some zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz's


lay back and catch some zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzs I like that!! Appropriately positioned sail to keep in the shade of course!!
landyacht
landyacht
WA
5921 posts
WA, 5921 posts
25 May 2009 10:25pm
Fascinating discussion.
my observations, on most surfaces, in light wind the sailor that gets going is the sailor who pays attention and SAILS the yacht, Pointing the yacht down wind and holding your hands up only works on water
Ive watched people oversheet , undersheet, point downwind, sit in soft sand, push onto a soft sand bank...............................
. It really comes down to practice and experience( gained by practice).
Blokarts have a different sheeting /downhaul system which when combined with thier skinnier,softer masts, cleverly overcomes some of the "downwind dilemnas" which traditional landyachts(TLY) face. . A great asset when being used by beginners and/or on narrow sailing venues.
Its fascinating when you put someone whos experience is from sailing a blowie into a TLY. They just point it down wind and sit there obviously thinking " what a POS, how does it go so fast when the other bloke sails it?"
What makes it hard for Lake Lefroy sailors is that you cn sail on smooth salt in 3knts of wind upwind. often the yachts will head out into the distance upwind for 5km without turning around to check if the wind is strong nough to get them home.
after a few hours, theyve pushed back straight downwind instead of trying to reach and get some speed, all the time cursing that paul day fella whos happily zooming around near the yacht club in the distance.
not having a long skinny strip to sail on makes it hard to understand the Dynamics involved.
Lake Walyungup has its own issues , like knowing where the windshadows are, the soft gravelly sand patches . Muzza will usually draw most of the obstacles on the course map. It is a surface where there is no such thing as enough practice, hence it become so hard to beat the locals.
The lightwind direction is also a messy , flukey wind that is a waste of time sailing in , so the locals have the sense to let the seabreeze kick in(18-22knts) before they race. hence no need to push and a good reason for seatbelts to be worn at all times. theres certainly no need to get out and push off the line.
The boys are all on the well ballasted side as well, eh Baz
Arjay
Arjay
VIC
267 posts
VIC, 267 posts
26 May 2009 12:52am
I always think..momentum,momentum,momentum!!! I remember "gybying" through about 140 degrees, 3 or 4 times at Lake Lefroy when the rest of the fleet were stopped on the leeward mark. Alas for me that little breeze I was in was enough to get them going, otherwise I would have just sailed right round the lot!

Gee you are spoilt by that lake!!!
landyacht
landyacht
WA
5921 posts
WA, 5921 posts
25 May 2009 10:56pm
well that makes 2 "thinking mans " landsailors out there in OZ
we're so spoilt we go off looking for tiny little claypans for a change of surface.
Mind you the one we use is still 4 times the size of Blokart bay
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
26 May 2009 3:53am
As I said earlier, the difference between one or two sailing around, and a race of 50 or so!
Beaches don't always allow you to choose where you go too much either.
I think I have the hang of down wind sailing fairly sorted don't I Paul?
I am trying to think for the general good, not my own personal success.
landyacht
landyacht
WA
5921 posts
WA, 5921 posts
26 May 2009 8:05pm
I think youve got it about right. I recall once , as I lapped you on 90 mile beach, "hmm , I think hes got that downwind bit just about right!"
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
27 May 2009 3:50am
Yep eventually you did!
Then there was the time at the Smirnoff regatta where I sailed Bill Easterbrooks 25+year old yacht and went past Bruno and Bertrand Lambert downwind, and held it the finish, and they bought me drinks!
We all have to remember the good ones, sometimes they are dismal too!
Actually the '96 (?) event was one of the regattas which prompted me to think about this discussion as that event was the worst ever for races being run to get a result. You may remember one NZ pilot who pushed all the way to the first mark, in a "sailing direction", came from the 3rd row of the grid, passed everybody (you included) as they struggled to sail at all, and was then vociferous in that it was a good race. May have even been the one you referred to as I just parked on the course and watched. (and counted how many yachts were not sailing at any one time, way over 60%).
landyacht
landyacht
WA
5921 posts
WA, 5921 posts
27 May 2009 7:32pm
havent been to the east islands since 86,
I do seem to recall that every time we meet you have the better looking yacht though
kiwi307
kiwi307
488 posts
488 posts
28 May 2009 4:36am
landyacht said...

havent been to the east islands since 86,
I do seem to recall that every time we meet you have the better looking yacht though


Gee, if my yachts have been the better looking I have missed out somewhere, performance always came before appearance! Function before form!
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