Ken Smith
ADMIN
Posts: 289
sail often, travel light
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« Reply #2 on: November 13, 2010, 08:41:29 PM » |
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Compared to the land sailors, the DN class is rigid and evolves at a glacially slow pace. There, there are a few one-design classes with rules as complex as the DN, a few box-rule classes (like the DN, but with fewer rules), two rigid one-designs with laser-like rules, and a set of "open" classes where the only rule is the sail area. The other classes can sail "open," too. A big advantage is that the land sailing venues are reliable, mostly, save excess or lack of wind (a one-or-two day problem, and a once in a decade or so rain event that ruins that lake (others are a few hundred miles away). Guess what. Participation is down.
Other ice boat classes have more open rules than the DN (skeeter classes); more rigid rules than the DN (Nite, renegade). Guess what? Participation is down.
The catamarans most active classes are box-rule classes (length, beam and sail area). The Hobies are one-design, but there are how many Hobie classes now? Guess what? Participation is down.
Soft water classes, someone else need comment, I stopped participating.
But the DN: Evolved into a narrow range of parameters that means almost anyone can reliably get the equipment and keep using it and stay pretty competitive. New or used: get a post 1980 hull; a Sherry, Kent, Rast, or other developed composite mast; and a wide range sail (FO1) and a flat sail (ABSS, JD Speed, or 1-D equivalent); plus three 3/8 insert and one pair of plates for snow, and you can make gold fleet. Every year several people drop out and sell their whole program for $1800 or less. A bargain! A boat can be competitive with 30 year old hardware. Mast steps don't get moved much. Boom blocks do. Shrouds usually need to be adjusted. All the fancy stuff just makes these adjustments easier. Pins and screws work fine, but take longer to install and adjust. If your new-used boat doesn't perform, tuning by a skilled sailor gets you 90% there. Some wood chips or glass and glue re-tunes the key component in a night or two of work.
Go find ANYTHING you can go out and compete with for such a price. Not bicycles, boats, motorcycles, go-carts, autos, quads, snow machines, dog seds, greyhounds, NOTHING.
However, you must race to compete, you must tune and sharpen to compete, you have to learn how to sail these boats, just like any class. Not easy or fast; no short cuts.
Where are the competitors, especially the new competitors? Not out in the shop, busy driving, or out sailing. Too many other fun alternatives, in their opinion.
Sorry, I believe we are best served by staying the same, providing open racing for members, and scheduling as much racing as we can. Come join us, help the new guys, have a blast. The cruisers, local hot-shots that don't travel, and the occasional racer all are participating. Welcome. If you want to sail with the best and really learn the class, join us at a regional or national or international event. Its all open to you.
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