| Re: Rules changes
[Re: Sloansailing]
#246121 03/26/12 11:07 AM 03/26/12 11:07 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California John Williams
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California | Rule 5: what about rudder rake adjustments? Is that a second axis?
John Williams
- The harder you practice, the luckier you get - Gary Player, pro golfer
After watching Lionel Messi play, I realize I need to sail harder.
| | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: John Williams]
#246131 03/26/12 11:34 AM 03/26/12 11:34 AM |
Joined: Oct 2008 Posts: 71 F18_VB
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 71 | Rule 5: what about rudder rake adjustments? Is that a second axis? Maybe it could to say one axis while racing and allow an axis to kick up the rudders? | | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: F18arg]
#246132 03/26/12 11:35 AM 03/26/12 11:35 AM |
Joined: Oct 2008 Posts: 71 F18_VB
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 71 | Published minutes Dec 2011.
Proposal : To update class rules by adding : ... D.2.x The hull centerplane means a longitudinal plane of symmetry of a hull. How is that rule going to work without requiring the hulls to be symmetrical? The Infusion, for example, doesn't have symmetrical hulls. | | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: Sloansailing]
#246139 03/26/12 12:25 PM 03/26/12 12:25 PM |
Joined: Oct 2008 Posts: 71 F18_VB
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 71 | You might want to check an actual boat. If you put Infusion hulls on backwards they cant inward instead of outward. I wouldn't call that symmetrical. I think the boat uses four hull molds too.
I would check with ISAF that they think that implicitly referenced rules are enforceable.
I'm fine with making rule say that the hulls shall be symmetrical. But, the rule shouldn't be implied. It should be explicit and clearly articulated. The AC72 rule (written by Pete Melvin) does a good job wording this by defining areas of the hull shells that shall be symmetrical and areas that can be symmetrical.
Rules that are implied or require knowledge of the rule's intentions are bad rules. Good rule clearly define what is and what is not legal. A good rule has well defined terms and must have a way to test if the rule is followed.
A lot of this is made difficult because F18 uses closed class rules instead of open class rules. In a closed class the ERS say, "anything not specifically permitted by the class rules is prohibited." So, the rules have to say "specifically" if symmetric hulls and/or asymmetric hulls are permitted. So, the rules need to be thorough enough to describe everything on the boat. The rules are not at that point.
Last edited by F18_VB; 03/26/12 12:25 PM.
| | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: John Williams]
#246140 03/26/12 12:26 PM 03/26/12 12:26 PM |
Joined: Aug 2006 Posts: 297 rexdenton
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 297 | Very well put. If you were to recommend a first couple of steps in that direction, what would you prioritize? This is a question for the whole fleet... A few ideas: 1) The forum for communication of rulings and complaints should be more transparent, accessible and obvious. When having an open meeting, post an agenda. Solicit agenda items. Cascade to Fleet reps. Run any open meetings via skype . All international meetings held in English. 2) Any persons ruling to advance an agenda (i.e. conflicts of interest, unethical behavior), will be dealt with harshly, i.e. loss or suspension of eligibility from the class, and removal from the ruling body. Cascade to regatta organizers. Enforce. 3) All complaint proceedings are private matters, until issuance of ruling. In the event that standings are affected by equipment interpretations, unless an example of egregious cheating (i.e. weight, sail plan, obvious box rule transgressions) all equipment complaints on-site should be considered ‘pending equipment appeal to the F18 ruling body’. This will limit on-site rulings to ‘on-the-water’ fouls and basic rules interpretations, rather than arcane equipment, or manufacturing rulings. Also, keeping the complaints private will cool and eliminate unnecessary 'churn' and acrimony. After ruling, cascade complaints and rulings, with simple allowed/disallowed rulings and a simple summary, to all National designees to all international web sites. Let the churn happen thereafter. This will avoid ruling by consensus opinion, which is both slow, and provides unacceptable sanctuary for executive leadership shortfalls. 4) Throw out all trivial equipment grievances immediately. (i.e. a sponsor's paint job, or decal as 'performance enhancing'). Inundating the ruling body with grievances is also not an acceptable means to influence race outcomes. Repeat trivial challenge offenders will be reprimanded by the ruling body, with penalties amounting to event suspension or disqualification, as a disincentive for recidivist ‘challenge’ behaviors. 5) When rules change, provide a context or explanation for the proposed change. A newsletter, or better yet, an appendix, specifying the nature and background of on proposed changes, along with the draft would be sufficient. Use a marked up adobe pdf as the draft document. Cascade to Fleet reps. 6) Rule in clear, concise, unambiguous English, using specific terminology. (The compass discussion was an example of an unintelligible mandate. The ruling body should have just listed devices that were class legal or illegal, or pending review.) If a device, or proposal is new, have the device owner or manufacturer submit the device manual, or proposed change for a ruling. Sometimes this can be a win-win situation. Make the equipment ruling mandate process decipherable to average sailors. Cascade to Fleet reps. 7) Decisions should be fast, fair unambiguous and final. Avoid ambiguity and jargon. The ruling body shall provide a list of pending actions and specific dates for when specific rulings/ rule challenges will occur. Cascade to Fleet reps. 8) Finally, Cost/performance analysis; The F18 Box rule was/is meant to keep the class inexpensive; a) if an equipment innovation is cheaper and better, and fosters healthy manufacturing, better competition, faster learning, or is simply practical (speedpucks, certain sail cloths), safer (rudimentary GPS devices, tracking apparatus, etc.) or historical/unavoidable (paint, decals) it’s in. Common sense is better than arcane twisted logic or rationalizations. b) If equipment very significantly drives up cost over an existing standard , or renders large numbers of boats competitively obsolete, it should be carefully reviewed. With the recent long-board discussion, I believe the main cost flash point for the F18 class was confronted in a generally positive and proactive fashion. However, the communication of the ruling was unnecessarily obtuse and difficult to interpret. 5) Manufacturers should meet annually with the class ruling body to discuss any design specification proposals, or concerns over new designs that may imperil the health of the class. Manufacturers should regard F18 cost containment as the Box Rule ‘high ground’. Respectfully, Rex Denton
Nacra F18 #856
| | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: rexdenton]
#246145 03/26/12 01:00 PM 03/26/12 01:00 PM |
Joined: Oct 2008 Posts: 71 F18_VB
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 71 | 1) The forum for communication of rulings and complaints should be more transparent, accessible and obvious. I agree. In fact, any class rule rulings should be posted for everyone to see. 2) Any persons ruling to advance an agenda (i.e. conflicts of interest, unethical behavior), will be dealt with harshly, i.e. loss or suspension of eligibility from the class, and removal from the ruling body. Cascade to regatta organizers. Enforce. I like the spirit. But, I don't know how to enforce it. It would help if I understood how the World Council and Technical Committee is selected. 4) Throw out all trivial equipment grievances immediately. This is probably not a good idea. I haven't heard anyone complain that there are too many grievances to handle and we don't want someone deciding what is trivial and what is not. What we should do is not have rules about trivial stuff. 5) When rules change, provide a context or explanation for the proposed change. A newsletter, or better yet, an appendix, specifying the nature and background of on proposed changes, along with the draft would be sufficient. Use a marked up adobe pdf as the draft document. Cascade to Fleet reps. We should be doing a lot of these things regardless of class rules. Wouldn't it be nice if we had a quarterly class newsletter so that we know what is going on in the class? I think we just need volunteers. I would, but I can't write very well. 6) Rule in clear, concise, unambiguous English, using specific terminology. ... 7) Decisions should be fast, fair unambiguous and final. Avoid ambiguity and jargon. The ruling body shall provide a list of pending actions and specific dates for when specific rulings/ rule challenges will occur. I agree. 8) Finally, Cost/performance analysis; The F18 Box rule was/is meant to keep the class inexpensive I'm not convinced anyone can make and objective determination what effect a rule will have on the cost to compete in the class. For example, how should initial cost and longevity be weighed? I know that no one has an objective way to say if one boat is faster than another. I'd be happy with rules that are largely what they are today, but with more clarity and specificity. | | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: F18arg]
#246146 03/26/12 01:01 PM 03/26/12 01:01 PM |
Joined: Aug 2006 Posts: 297 rexdenton
enthusiast
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Posts: 297 | Published minutes Dec 2011.
Agreed unanimously The WP reported that many elements of the ERS do not suit multihulls. The boat centreplane of a multihull is not defined. The WP suggested a clarification defining this as: D.6.x The boat centreplane is the vertical longitudinal plane of the boat which passes through the centre point of the front and rear beams.
This is ambiguous. Suggest the following: The boat centreplane is defined as the vertical longitudinal plane of the boat each individual hull passing through the centre point of attachment to front and rear beams. The daggger boards and rudders will be at 90 degrees to the angle of attachment to the beams, with their major axis parallel, and in line with the centerplane.
Nacra F18 #856
| | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: rexdenton]
#246148 03/26/12 01:11 PM 03/26/12 01:11 PM |
Joined: Oct 2008 Posts: 71 F18_VB
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 71 | Published minutes Dec 2011.
Agreed unanimously The WP reported that many elements of the ERS do not suit multihulls. The boat centreplane of a multihull is not defined. The WP suggested a clarification defining this as: D.6.x The boat centreplane is the vertical longitudinal plane of the boat which passes through the centre point of the front and rear beams.
This is ambiguous. Suggest the following: The boat centreplane is defined as the vertical longitudinal plane of the boat each individual hull passing through the centre point of attachment to front and rear beams. The daggger boards and rudders will be at 90 degrees to the angle of attachment to the beams, with their major axis parallel, and in line with the centerplane. That would make the Infusion illegal. The hulls, rudders, and daggerboards are canted outward. Also, better wording would reuse definitions from ISAF's Equipment Rules of Sailing (ERS) because the definitions are well defined through use in many classes. | | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: F18_VB]
#246153 03/26/12 01:20 PM 03/26/12 01:20 PM |
Joined: Aug 2006 Posts: 297 rexdenton
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 297 | Published minutes Dec 2011.
Agreed unanimously The WP reported that many elements of the ERS do not suit multihulls. The boat centreplane of a multihull is not defined. The WP suggested a clarification defining this as: D.6.x The boat centreplane is the vertical longitudinal plane of the boat which passes through the centre point of the front and rear beams.
This is ambiguous. Suggest the following: The boat centreplane is defined as the vertical longitudinal plane of the boat each individual hull passing through the centre point of attachment to front and rear beams. The daggger boards and rudders will be at 90 degrees to the angle of attachment to the beams, with their major axis parallel, and in line with the centerplane. That would make the Infusion illegal. The hulls, rudders, and daggerboards are canted outward. Also, better wording would reuse definitions from ISAF's Equipment Rules of Sailing (ERS) because the definitions are well defined through use in many classes. No. Actually, it was written with the Infusion and Cap in mind...re-read it, and remember that the 'angle of attachment to the beams' is canted 4 degrees on the Infusion. I own one...and, uhhh, had to make a minor repair of sorts that made me very familiar with the design specs...Long story thats all figured out now!
Last edited by rexdenton; 03/26/12 01:21 PM.
Nacra F18 #856
| | | Re: Rules changes
[Re: rexdenton]
#246158 03/26/12 01:34 PM 03/26/12 01:34 PM |
Joined: Oct 2008 Posts: 71 F18_VB
journeyman
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journeyman
Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 71 | No. Actually, it was written with the Infusion and Cap in mind...re-read it, and remember that the 'angle of attachment to the beams' is canted 4 degrees on the Infusion. I own one...and, uhhh, had to make a minor repair of sorts that made me very familiar with the design specs...Long story thats all figured out now! Provide a definition for the "angle of attachment to the beams" because it is not clear to me what that is. Are you suggesting that the attachment (beam landings?) is something separate from the rest of the hull? Here is the AC72 rule that I like: Each hull shall be designed to be symmetrical and shall be symmetrical, within +/- 0.005 m, about its hull centerplane except hull surface that is: (a) between transverse planes 1.000 m forward and 13.000 m forward of the stern plane that is also 0.400 m or more above MWP as shown in Appendix C; (b) within 0.250 m radius from the axis of rotation of the rudder and (c) an area on the surface of the hull not exceeding 1.000 m longitudinally by 0.400 m transverse girth within which a daggerboard opening is wholly contained and (d) for local reinforcement necessary for fittings.
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