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DSK wrote:
Walt wrote: The new Laser vang is 15 to 1. More and more classes are understanding the value of a powerful vang. Of course, all that force can break the gooseneck if you forget to ease it when you bear off... IMHO most of that purchase is wasted on bending the boom, it's real benefit is that you can set the vang tension without wrestling for it and you get a very fine adjustment increments. It depends on the boom. Yes, the Laser boom bends at higher forces. So does mine, but I've got an older Proctor boom. The newer SuperSpar booms don't bend nearly as much. The mast on the other hand...but that's the point, isn't it? But what you say is mostly correct. Ease of adjustment and fine tuning is a bigger part than sheer gorrilla-osity. Especially with the halyard tension, which I have not found to improve things with increased tension after a certain point. The top boats come roaring down the starting line planing on a port tack with 40 seconds to go before the start, find themselves a gap, roll tack the boat to a dead stop inches to leeward of the next boat, and then foot off into the gap to accelerate into the front row. It's quite the sight. Heh heh the starting line is too long, or there are too many people in the class settling for a second-row start. In Laser & Lightning & J-24 & intercollegiate starts, the line length is the total beam of all boats in the start - 1. Yes, there are some RC that set a cruelly short line, but I think you exaggerate with the total beam -1 figure . It's not musical chairs, you know. For instance, I was RC for the Laser districts this spring. We set a reasonably generous line, and it wasn't even really blowing. This was at the direction of the poobah District important-sounding title guy. And at the intercollegiate races we host at our club we shoot for a 1.5 ratio for the starting line. Sometimes we'll deliberately set a too short line for practice, but the norm is to allow enough room for the entire fleet to be on the line at once. (and of course they aren't - second and third row seats abound) BTW, I think there's always a gap in the line somewhere, bucause with 90% of the fleet camped out with a minute to go nobody can see the entire thing. Except for the hotshot coming down the line on port... It's better when the guys who think they're hot stuff are fighting for the favored end, then you can get a good open slot 1/3 of the way down the line. Although I hate giving up completely on the favored end, once in a blue moon you can pull off one of those 'win-the-whole-race-in-the-first-5-seconds' starts that are so memorable. And the other non-blue moon days you're stuffed up with a dozen other boats trying to win the end. No thanks. That good open slot 1/3 of the way down is pretty attractive. Personally, I'll gladly give up a boat length or two for clean air. //Walt |
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