One thing I have against the F 16 class is the lack of crew weights. As I understand there are none. Is it fare if I go sailing with my wife and we weigh 300 lbs and another sailor is sailing with his kid and they weigh 200 lbs. If we both had equal skills I would never be able to keep up carrying an extra 100 lbs. That would keep me from buying an F16. Why does the F16 class not have a proven weight system like the F18 ? Just my thoughts.
Dave,
There has been a lot of discussion on weight, but to say a proven weight system like on the F18 is a huge leap from logic. The most important issue with weight on a cat (especially a light weight platform like the F16) is not how much but where and when you place that weight. To strap on a bunch of lead to a boat is doing nothing more than a providing an inept sense of equality, it is no more fair than no weight correction. To race on an F18 with my wife we would have to run small sail plan and still strap on a bunch of weight to a boat that already weights 400 lbs. This is stupid and the primary reason we never seriously considered the option of buying an F18.
When I sail with Gina we are 265 on a good day. I have raced with some friends and my brother-in-law with crew weight up to about 340. The boat obviously does not feel the same, but finish wise we came in right in the same relative position against those we normaly race with, so there was no difference in ultimate boat performance over that range of crew weight.
With the spin and the adjustment in sail trim available on the new boats/sails, it is how you sail. On a H16 I would agree weight is a pretty large factor with 2 equally skilled skippers, but not on a new spin boat. As a light weight, I would say we are seriously disadvantaged in winds over 15, in the medium stuff there is not much difference, and less than 5 is anyones game anyway depending on your luck that day.
The F16 is definitely not everything to everyone (No matter what Wouter says) It is ultimately only 16 ft long, so there are some disadvantages there in certain conditions, but the design has proven to outperform the perceptions that have traditionaly been associated with 16' platforms. I love sailing mine. Ask those guys out there who have one or those that have been on them. We got generaly very good feed back from the Alter Cup, and that primarily was that people were supprised at how well a 16 did perform in wind and with reasonably large crew weights.
The weight of the platform really make a difference in how the boat feels sailing on the water (and moving on shore). The US number system in particualar will always be wrong for all boats sometimes so the fact you can be able to go and race even or close with a variety on other designs is a nice feature. Beacause of these things and the versatilty of the 1/2 up, the F16 class has been steadily growing not only in the US but world wide.
Matt