hi guys,
i asked pete to contribute and he tried but couldn't sort out his password. user error.

so he sent me an email and this is what he had to add.
Hi Justin having read the bit about tandem on seabreeze i hope you can post my reply i build the first tandem in 1978 which were 6m long with three sail stations including a centreboard like on the windsurfer , brand only one to copy, the guy in the middle was responsble for raising and lowering it . going about was a bit of an art as you can imagine he basically had to lay his sail down for the forward and rear sail to tack once this was done it was his turn we soon dispenced with the middle station and leaving the centreboard at home as it did not need it relying on the rail line and mastrack in its rear station to go to windward yes this board slots cut out on the deck like a windsurfer so you had to pull your mast base out of the board and move it to the rear ,mind you we never moved it if it was windy as it wanted to go to windward on its own, my brother and i sailed it mostly when i was still in Tassy .I eventually sold it to sombody in Hobart so came the next one still 6m long , I build 4 of the 6m ones and sold them 2 in tassy one in Melbourne one in QLd where i moved to in 1980 and build the last long one there from the experience i had with tandems is that the placing of the stations is verry critical and basically ballancing the sails over the lenght of the board working out the center of effort to the latteral resistance if you ar looking at a planing board is different to a long tandem as we found out once i build shorter ones the last tendem by me were 4.6m long and was build in 1988 which i still have one at that stage this board had build in rolling mast tracks and were state of the art at that stage for front and rear .The process for going about was the front sailer eased off and the rear sailer sheeted in to initiate the tack for a gybe it worked the opposite with a bit of a ballancing act , to do this we moved the stations apart and the repositioned them either off the wind forward and upwind back a smaller sail in the front worked the best also the best sailer should be at the rear otherwise the front one gets clobbert with the mast in a catapult from the rear > At the present moment iam thinking of building a shorter version which had been on my mind for a while as the interest was rekindled after sailing the old one on the weekend and thy are great fun just cruising in Morton Bay and can also be used as a teaching aid for shortboard learning which i had used one when we had our windsurfing school on Bribie island just make sure that the person you sail with is under your command otherwise you might not get anywhere Peter Nitschke owner of Caloundrawind andsurf and Manta NXS sailboards, Kiteboards with 34 years in the windsurfing business
p.s. wineman, i will get photos next time i am at the factory and upload them.