Being a new comer I have to some what agree with the above post.On Buying a boat and joining the class I was quite supprised (and a little disappointed) to find out the DN is not true One Design class.Both of the other classes I compete in (Laser and Hobie) are both SMOD classes.This for my liking is the way to go,but again what do I know I have only owned the DN for 6 mths and extremly excited to get out and compete.
It is true that Iceboats are not smod’s. Then again if they were, no one could build their own boat. Ask yourself this, what is the competitive weight for a H 16 crew? How about a Laser? Smods typecasts ideal skipper weights in a very narrow range. Dn’s have competitive skippers in the gold fleet ranging from ~130 lbs to 275 lbs. that is pretty cool. The second thing is that the DN today is very different then the DN of 1936. Think about it, Inserts, bendy masts, much lighter boats all sprung from this evolution.
There are obviously plusses and minuses to this. The one thing I would point out is that the evolution in the class is very slow. Post 1980 Hulls and planks stay competitive for 20+ years if treated properly. Masts are long lived if not abused. I am still racing a 2003 vintage mast. Runners last forever if you don’t crash them. A 20 year old insert that was built well and sharpened properly is still a great runner.
Mostly I think this class has it right.
cheers,
Eric