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Default Best in Class Racing

What are the best boats for one-design racing?

The categories a

1. Performance Dinghy

2. Small sailboat under 29 feet

3. Mid sized sailboat 30-39 feet

4. Yacht class 40-50 feet

5. One man catamaran

6. Two man catamaran

7. Under 40' crewed catamaran.

Rule: Must be production boats with more than 25 built for larger boats.
30' +
More than 50 must be built for smaller boats under 30'.

Bonus: Your pick for the hottest one-design class in the foreseeable
future.


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Default Best in Class Racing

"Bart Senior" scribbled thusly:
What are the best boats for one-design racing?


One-design classes....

Seriously, there are so many different ones because there
are so many different desires people have. I happen to
dislike Flying Scots but it's a great boat for big people
who don't want to hike or trapeze. OTOH I love the Lightning
but it's complex & expensive & hard on the crew.


The categories a

1. Performance Dinghy


OzOne wrote:
Intrnational 14


Great boats but they're really not one-design. It's a
demanding boat but also very rewarding.

I would nominate the Johnson 18... it's a boat that is fast,
will beat beach cats and can plane upwind, yet with no trap
it presents a high need for tactical thinking at every stage
of the race. It's also simple and inexpensive to campaign.

I would like to try one of these.
http://www.boats.com/new-boats/ldcra...80/details.jsp

How about a singlehand dinghy?


2. Small sailboat under 29 feet


OzOne wrote:
Soling


Colgate 26, Sonar, Laser 28, MacGregor 26


3. Mid sized sailboat 30-39 feet


Etchells


Yep


4. Yacht class 40-50 feet


OzOne wrote:
Farr 40


Haven't seen enough of one to say. They have a reputation
for being kinda fragile.


5. One man catamaran


Hobie


Yuck

Cheshire or Nacra 18sq or A-cat


6. Two man catamaran


Nacra


Tornado


7. Under 40' crewed catamaran.


Ohhhhhhh
Lightspeed 32


Reynolds 33
Volvo GP 40



Bonus: Your pick for the hottest one-design class in the foreseeable
future.


The Laser

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

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Default Best in Class Racing

OzOne wrote:

On Wed, 09 Aug 2006 07:53:58 -0400, DSK
scribbled thusly:


"Bart Senior" scribbled thusly:

What are the best boats for one-design racing?


One-design classes....

Seriously, there are so many different ones because there
are so many different desires people have. I happen to
dislike Flying Scots but it's a great boat for big people
who don't want to hike or trapeze. OTOH I love the Lightning
but it's complex & expensive & hard on the crew.



The categories a

1. Performance Dinghy


OzOne wrote:

Intrnational 14


Great boats but they're really not one-design. It's a
demanding boat but also very rewarding.



Yep, I raced a Javelin here for a while.


Don't know that one... is it like this?
http://www.javelinuk.com/


Same story, highly restricted development class but waaaay cheaper
than the I14


I thought the idea of using a slightly de-hotted I-14 as the
basis for a strict one-design class was a good one, never
caught on though. Here there was one called a "Gran Prix 14"
which was a double-trap A-sail boat such as the I-14s were
around 1990 or so.



How about a singlehand dinghy?



My Favourite is the Contender....a Laser on steroids with a trap
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contender_(dinghy)
Blindingly fast!


Seen them around, there are a few in the U.S. Not many and
I've never been offered a chance to sail one.

Ever sailed an 18sq Int'l Canoe? They're pretty cool.



Farr 40


Haven't seen enough of one to say. They have a reputation
for being kinda fragile.



Not really so.
The top guys break em because they sail em like madmen.


The ones I've seen have had rudder & mast problems, I
suspected mishandling more than overpowering. The fastest
race horses bite, too


5. One man catamaran

Hobie


Yuck


Yeah, but tough and fast in the right hands.


I assume you mean the old 16s, the banana hulled wonder?
They're nice in they rarely break anything and you can sail
them right up the beach. But I don't like the heavy helm,
lack of steering in general, and the unwillingness to tack.
The 17s, 18s, and Miracle 20s are much much better boats IMHO.





Reynolds 33
Volvo GP 40



Considered the Reynolds but it just ain't pretty from any angle.


True and they have shown an alarming tendency to flip right
when there's an audience!



Bonus: Your pick for the hottest one-design class in the foreseeable
future.


The Laser


Yep, they're booming here atm the simplicity of a sailboard in a
dinghy with incredibly competitive racing.
They're being used here as fitness machines for we older sailors.


I keep putting off getting one... maybe I should get racks
to tote one along on the tugboat?

DSK

 
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