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Re: "hull year" [Re: sail7seas] #41418
12/24/04 10:47 PM
12/24/04 10:47 PM
Joined: Jul 2001
Posts: 390
samevans Offline
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samevans  Offline
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Posts: 390
Chris,
The story about Hobie hull "year" versus the actual year a hull was constructed has been discussed here before.
Supposedly H-Corp. builds large numbers of hulls at a time without serial numbers (look at the hand etched serial numbers on hulls).
As they construct boats, they put the current year serial numbers on the hulls.

Hulls built by one group of incompetants could be used for several years production.

If a company found a group of its products to be defective, they could stop using that product run for production boats, and use the remaining stock as replacements.
Of course that would be rude and tacky (possibly illegal?) and we all know that the GREAT AND BENEFICENT HOBIE CORP would never do that to their loyal customers

-- Have You Seen This? --
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: davidn] #41419
12/25/04 09:57 PM
12/25/04 09:57 PM
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 606
League City, TX
flumpmaster Offline
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flumpmaster  Offline
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Posts: 606
League City, TX
There is a great crowd of Hobie 20 sailors in Texas - I think they have made a fleet at nearly every regatta I have been to this year. There are also a few who will put spinnakers on the boat for distance races like the Great Texas Catamaran Race and Ruff Riders. The new Tornado spin seems to be a popular option.

The winner of the Great Texas Cat Race in 2004 was a Hobie 20 with a Tornado spin. The boat had an additional set of stays made from high tech fiber rigged from the top of the comp tip to the side stay anchor plates.

Ruffriders was also won by a different Hobie 20, also with a Tornado spinnaker. (Bag launch in both cases I think).

The Hobie 20 is a glorious boat. Very satisfying to sail and crew on. Contrary to some statements made in this post I have not seen it perform faster upwind than the Nacra 20 (another very fine catamaran). Sailing downwind in 12 or more knots it is great to wild-thing a Miracle 20.

What it lacks is a class legal spinnaker. Once you are used to running a spinnaker downwind on a beach cat I think you are spoiled for life. No matter what the attraction of one design (or formula) racing on non-spinnaker boats, I think the adrenaline trip of running a spin out weighs this.

I think this means an inevitable move from non-spin to spinnaker boats (vive le F18!). Before that happens though, long live the Hobie 20 class in it's current form. And may I propose adoption of the Tornado spin, rigged any way you want as an separate class for distance racing - in the style of the Nacra 6.0NA w/New England spin.

Chris.

P.S. I am sad to report that the Nacra 6.0 NA may be declining in Texas. At least one regular has defected to the Nacra 20 camp.


Dave Ingram is my president. tcdyc rules
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: flumpmaster] #41420
12/27/04 04:32 PM
12/27/04 04:32 PM
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 101
chesapeake bay
davidn Offline OP
member
davidn  Offline OP
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Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 101
chesapeake bay
Quote
What it lacks is a class legal spinnaker. Once you are used to running a spinnaker downwind on a beach cat I think you are spoiled for life. No matter what the attraction of one design (or formula) racing on non-spinnaker boats, I think the adrenaline trip of running a spin out weighs this.


Now that's what I suspected! The Hobie 20 is a great, non-spin boat, but to attract new owners, I think it must have a spinnaker these days. You make an interesting point about running an extra set of wires from the top of the mast to support it. Also, is the Tornado spin about the same size as the I20/N20 spin (I think about 270 sq. ft.)?

David
H20

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: davidn] #41421
12/27/04 04:54 PM
12/27/04 04:54 PM
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 264
Neb
flounder Offline
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Posts: 264
Neb
The Hobie 20 is a really fun boat minus the spinnaker. H20 fleets are strong in the Midwest and up until last year could be considered the strongest in this area.

To attract more sailors to the H20:

1. Make the boat lighter weight. It is not an easy boat to lug around a beach with two people.

2. Automate some of the adjustments. Waves, H16s and Getaways are popular because they are simple. There are a lot of lines on an H20 and adding a Spin. isn't going to make it more popular.

3. Wings. I don't know if the "Euro-Wings" are avail. for the H20, but wings: A. are comfy & B. Help when in a good blow.

4. Price. The cheaper they can make it, the better.

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: flounder] #41422
12/27/04 05:34 PM
12/27/04 05:34 PM
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 5,558
Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH...
Mary Offline
Carpal Tunnel
Mary  Offline
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 5,558
Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH...
Flounder, all of your suggestions can easily be handled by just making a remote control model version of the boat that can be operated from a comfortable chair on a dock.

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: Mary] #41423
12/27/04 05:46 PM
12/27/04 05:46 PM
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 264
Neb
flounder Offline
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flounder  Offline
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Neb
Not being on the boat takes all the fun out of it! ha ha ha.

I have to admit though that those little remote controlled power boats are a lot of fun in a pool.

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: flounder] #41424
12/27/04 08:01 PM
12/27/04 08:01 PM
Joined: Nov 2001
Posts: 195
Texas
majsteve Offline
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majsteve  Offline
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Joined: Nov 2001
Posts: 195
Texas
The h20 is a hoot with a reacher on it. The sail drives the bows down a bit more so you have to shift your weight back but its furling system helps alot. Also can sail upwind in REALLY light air. Have done it have photos and a shirt to prove it.

Steve

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: majsteve] #41425
12/27/04 09:07 PM
12/27/04 09:07 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,116
Annapolis, MD
Mark Schneider Offline
Carpal Tunnel
Mark Schneider  Offline
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Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,116
Annapolis, MD
Hi David

It sounds like you would like find a consensus among the Hobie 20 racers for some kind of "unoffical class" approved spinaker rig... much like the New England 6.0 nacra group did. The goal of course is to get a level playing field on the race course while providing an unofficial and unsanctioned upgrade path that any H20 sailor could join in and support. If the Texas 20's, who are pre disposed to this kind of tinkering, have landed on a Tornado chute for the boat... you might have the begining of a consensus.

One thing to keep in mind. Texel and ISAF rate spinakers by size relative to the length of the boat and the Tornado chute at 25 sq meter for a 20 foot boat is considered oversized and docked another percent (in Texel ratings at least.) USPN does not regulate spinaker size with respect to rating adjustment (although Darline has long thought that such a thing should be regulated)

Take Care
Mark



crac.sailregattas.com
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: flounder] #41426
12/29/04 11:30 PM
12/29/04 11:30 PM
Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 248
Colorado
SteveT Offline
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SteveT  Offline
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Posts: 248
Colorado
Quote
1. Make the boat lighter weight. It is not an easy boat to lug around a beach with two people.
2. Automate some of the adjustments. Waves, H16s and Getaways are popular because they are simple. There are a lot of lines on an H20 and adding a Spin. isn't going to make it more popular.
3. Wings. I don't know if the "Euro-Wings" are avail. for the H20, but wings: A. are comfy & B. Help when in a good blow.
4. Price. The cheaper they can make it, the better.


Oh, Man! I can't imagine that any of this would make the boat more popular. On the contrary, it would probably sink (pardon the pun) the class. The H-20 is a technical, difficult boat to sail well. It's that challenge that brings people to the fleet. Why else would someone move up from a H16 or TheMightyHobie18, or anything else, if the 20 was less technical and less challenging?

1. When considering lighter weight, consider durability. The boat is already built lighter per foot than the 18.
2.See above
3. My couch is comfy and sailing skill is much more usefull in a big blow.
4. I'll pay for quality.

Don't change a thing. The boat is great the way it is. If you want to race one-design with a spinnaker, get a spin-designed boat. If you want to do distance races, modify a spinnaker for the 20, but any major class-sanctioned changes won't make the fleet more appealing.

Last edited by SteveT; 12/29/04 11:35 PM.

H-20 #896
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: SteveT] #41427
12/30/04 11:32 AM
12/30/04 11:32 AM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 833
St. Louis, MO,
Mike Hill Offline
old hand
Mike Hill  Offline
old hand

Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 833
St. Louis, MO,
Good Post Steve!! I totally agree. I think the H20 class is great the way it is right now. I would hate to see a bunch of changes made to one of the best boats ever produced.

Mike Hill
Tiger #1520


Mike Hill
N20 #1005
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: Mike Hill] #41428
12/30/04 04:53 PM
12/30/04 04:53 PM
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 101
chesapeake bay
davidn Offline OP
member
davidn  Offline OP
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Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 101
chesapeake bay
Mike,
Not to be argumentative, but you used to own an H20 and now own a Tiger. Why did you switch? If it was because the class was dying out where you were sailing, how much larger is the Tiger class? In my area it is smaller than our extremely small H20 class. Was it for the spinnaker? Was it to get on an up and coming boat? SteveT says that is why and where he is going in 2006.

Your switching boats and Steve's anticipated switch seem to make my point that, even though the H20 is a wonderful boat and basically the only 20 footer racing without a spinnaker, those facts may not be enough to attract new skippers or even retain current skippers. I could just try to sell the H20 and go out and buy a Tiger, but I would like to stay with the 20 and would like to see the class flourish. Since I don't see any 2 person race boats being developed without spinnakers, that leads me to highly suspect a spinnaker may be needed to keep the boat current. If Hobie had a another 20 foot spin boat (like the I20) I would not see any reason for them to consider a change, in fact I would expect them to phase the Miracle 20 out. Since the above is not the case, I think there is a good argument to be made to consider updating the Hobie 20.

Since Matt says emphatically there are no changes going to be made to the H20, I would ask him what he sees in the future for a top-of-the-line 20 foot racing cat from Hobie. Is the Tiger going to be the top line boat? Is the Miracle going to be the top line boat? (It could; it more than matches the Tiger upwind and with a spin would outrun it downwind.)

David
H20

Re: inter 20 and Hobie 20 [Re: davidn] #41429
12/30/04 05:25 PM
12/30/04 05:25 PM
Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 281
Houston, Texas
EasyReiter Offline
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EasyReiter  Offline
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Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 281
Houston, Texas
These boats can race boat for boat, by adding a spin to the Hobie. I can beat some of them and some of them beat me. I'll presume it is sailing skill.
My future wife has no problem with the spin, but we trade off on long runs. Ratchetting blocks are key.
if the Hobies and the inters are raced boat for boat then there is a larger class, and everyone agrees that racing boat for boat is better than racing numbers, (unless the numbers are really in your favor and you do not wish to improve your sailing skill).
my 2 cents. where we sail it is getting harder to attract sailors to race. anything that makes a larger class is good.


Marc Reiter I 20 #861 Dikes, Ferries and Tramps. www.texascitydike.com
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: davidn] #41430
12/30/04 05:45 PM
12/30/04 05:45 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 833
St. Louis, MO,
Mike Hill Offline
old hand
Mike Hill  Offline
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Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 833
St. Louis, MO,
I switched for a lot of reasons. I really loved racing the H20 and resisted changing. I also ran a chute on my H20 in some distance races which was fun. Since the H20 was not designed with a spinnaker in mind from the start it suffers from some helm issues under spinnaker.

I switched because I do like sailing with a spinnaker better. Also I saw the class moving to the F18 class Nationwide. I saw the Tiger as giving me lots of alternatives for racing around the country.

And contrary to what some others think in my opinion an H20 can not compete fairly against an I20 in a heads up race. An I20 is simply faster upwind by a good margin. An I20 has a 32 foot mast compared to a 30' 6" mast. It simply has a more powerful engine. I'm sure an I20 is also faster downwind but I don't have any personal experience to base that on.

Mike Hill
Tiger #1520


Mike Hill
N20 #1005
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: davidn] #41431
12/30/04 06:10 PM
12/30/04 06:10 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,906
Clermont, FL, USA
David Ingram Offline
Carpal Tunnel
David Ingram  Offline
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Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 3,906
Clermont, FL, USA
Quote

Since Matt says emphatically there are no changes going to be made to the H20, I would ask him what he sees in the future for a top-of-the-line 20 foot racing cat from Hobie. Is the Tiger going to be the top line boat? Is the Miracle going to be the top line boat? (It could; it more than matches the Tiger upwind and with a spin would outrun it downwind.)

David
H20


David I used to drive a H20 about 4 years ago, and I also wrote Matt asking him if Hobie would consider changing the sail plan to be more competitive with the N60 (the hot boat at the time). He gave me gave me exactly same answer he has given here. At the time I was a little put out by his response. Now in hindsight (many years later) I can appreciate Matt's position and his support of the class. I'll be the first one to admit I have an issue or two with Hobie and Mr. Miller, but I really do respect their position when it comes to preserving a one design class (still love on the Hobie edict though Matt).

As you have also pointed out the H20 is one of the last 20’, sloop, non spin, and two up boats left. I’d be willing to bet a large portion of the folks sailing the H20 are rather one design centric and aren’t looking for the kind of changes to the boat you are proposing (otherwise they would have left by now). You have yourself a very nice niche, try to exploit it! Not every team wants to run a spin around the cans and as several people including you have stated you can always put a spin on the boat and have a competitive distance racer.

Just because the H20 isn’t the bell of the ball anymore doesn’t mean she doesn’t have a lot of fans out there. The TheMightyHobie18 Magnum has made a respectable comeback in FL, and for a while the H14 was pretty hot. If for some reason Matt has a complete break down and allows the H20 to be modified as you propose, I’d bet a case of Mt. Gay the H20 will join the ranks of the P19MX and NE60/N60 inside a year.

One more thing, if Matt had allowed the sail plan changes I wanted way back when I would have left anyway. I had/have a serious hard on for the N20.

Dave


David Ingram
F18 USA 242
http://www.solarwind.solar

"Do or do not. There is no try." - Yoda
"Excuses are the tools of the weak and incompetent" - Two sista's I overheard in the hall
"You don't have to be a brain surgeon to be a complete idiot, but it helps"
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: David Ingram] #41432
12/30/04 09:31 PM
12/30/04 09:31 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,459
Annapolis,MD
Keith Offline
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Keith  Offline
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Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,459
Annapolis,MD
Some ramblings...

The differences between the H20 and the P19 and NE 6.0 are that the P19 class was pretty much already dead when the MX rig showed up, and the NE 6.0 seems to be dying for just the reason folks would like to see Hobie update the 20 - it sounds like they're going to the I20 because it has a factory rig that includes the spin instead of having to cobble something together.

The 20 is still a viable boat in some areas, and even if you don't add the spin, some updates to the rest of it just may help keep things going and fresh. I always got the feeling with Hobie that once a boat is designed and built, that's it, no updates to the class. After awhile it feels like a joke.

So Hobie is left with no viable answer to the N20, and until they can find another boat to import, they won't. And by viable answer to the N20 I don't mean something that will necessarily run head to head with it, but something that will at least capture sailor's imaginations enough to stay with the Hobie. From a new boat perspective, I'd see little reason to buy one over a Tiger, except that at my weight and size I like a 20 foot boat, so it would be N20 for me if I wanted a spin.

At the point I sold my 20 I was contemplating adding a spinnaker, not because of any illusions of catching I20s, it was just because I really liked sailing with a spin. I was a bit hesitant regarding the hull strength, as my boat had previously had a repair to the infamous hull problem - it had been repaired with no problems showing anymore, but I didn't want to push it.

I liked the feeling of the 20, it's pretty and it's responsive and balanced and quick, but it wasn't up to the speed of a 6.0 with no spin, and the 6.0 holds crew weight better. The first time I powered through chop without slapping the crossbeams and tramp in the water I knew that even though I missed the 20 I was happy with the new boat. But, if the 20 had the speed potential near the 6.0 I probably would have stuck with it.

So maybe there's an idea for the 20 foot non-spin boats - try to get some parity among them through updates and sail heads up in a non-spin formula class as well as in one-design. I'd bet you could update the H20 with mods that could fold back into the class, and give it dual life, and breath some life into some dying classes.

I've always felt that with dying-class boats that there was an opportunity for an owner's group to form a non-factory class association and take the boats where the factory won't. This could happen - the NE 6.0 guys had something like that going, but it's now faltering. I think in the end, the basis of strength for these kinds of things would come from people willing to breath new life into older boats because they don't want to spend the cash for a new one, or are just big fans of the particular design. But it also relies on something else that is a big soap-box issue for me - you need enough sailors. Here I'll get off topic, sorry.

We're still in the game of moving sailors from one class to the next. In the end, one class thrives and another one dies. Maybe that's just the way it will be, some sailors are always going to move around, and why shouldn't they? But if we continue to bring new sailors into the sport, the variety might thrive and might indeed be the reason the new sailors come in.

So, new blood, new blood, new blood, new blood. With new sailors comes the critical mass to keep existing classes alive and keep new ones growing. David - spec out some changes to the 20, and pump it up not just among the existing sailors but to new blood - "here's a great bang for the buck alternative, find out if you like cat sailing without buying a new N20" kind of a thing.

In our area the A-Cats are the growing class, and with good reason. And some people have traded in their whatever boats to go there. But we've also gotten some mono converts, and we're always looking for the next batch of people to join the WRCRA to take the spots the A-Cats might leave behind.

Why am I saying this? Because the H20 is a nice boat and I think an upgrade would be great, but no upgrade is going to change an I20 sailor back. But it might make a great alternative to somebody who hasn't gone there yet, and that person might be the fresh blood - whether the upgrade is something Hobie offers or some other package of specs. The Hobie 20 is not unique here, I think the 18 could still be used in such a manner, but it would take some vision. And you'd have to remember that the target is new blood.

As a relatively new 6.0 sailor, I have to admit I'm disappointed that the NE scene doesn't seem to be working out, it's something I would have moved my boat towards. But we've got three 6.0s in our club, who knows, maybe the Chesapeake 6.0 spec is next...

Ramble mode off, Happy New Years to all!

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: Keith] #41433
12/30/04 10:59 PM
12/30/04 10:59 PM
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 602
Wilmington,NC
Dlennard Offline
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Dlennard  Offline
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Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 602
Wilmington,NC
Keith, David

Hobie does make a 20'spin boat called the Hobie Fox. The boat just did not seem to do well in the US when they cut the mast and put a comp-tip on it.

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: Dlennard] #41434
12/30/04 11:50 PM
12/30/04 11:50 PM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,459
Annapolis,MD
Keith Offline
veteran
Keith  Offline
veteran

Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,459
Annapolis,MD
I don't know about others, but the Fox just never caught my fancy.

Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: Keith] #41435
12/31/04 12:39 AM
12/31/04 12:39 AM
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,911
South Florida & the Keys
arbo06 Offline
Pooh-Bah
arbo06  Offline
Pooh-Bah

Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 1,911
South Florida & the Keys
The H20 is a nice boat. The Fox is a nice boat too but not nice enough to bait the H20 guys into making a fresh investment. Although I am a "B Fleet" sailor, there have been many times that I have hung in there with the rock stars until I made a fatal error, always my fault, not the boats'.


Eric Arbogast
ARC 2101
Miami Yacht Club
Re: Hobie 20 mods [Re: arbo06] #41436
12/31/04 04:58 PM
12/31/04 04:58 PM
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 101
chesapeake bay
davidn Offline OP
member
davidn  Offline OP
member

Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 101
chesapeake bay
The problem with the Fox (with apologies for drifting a bit off topic) is that Hobie brought over a F20 spec boat and had it compete with the I20 which had more sail area for the lighter US winds (i.e. it wasn't a F20 spec boat at that point). The I20 had a head start in the market, and Hobie comes along with the Fox which is slower on the race course...result is no one bought them. Its an odd marketing decision on Hobie's part, especially when we see them willing to allow the Tiger to be not strictly spec'd for F18.

So Hobie has no top-of-the-line spin boat. The choices are:
1. Consider the Tiger the top line boat and don't worry about competing with the I20
2. Bring back the Fox with US mods so it can go head to head with the I20
3. Modify the H20 so it could go head to head with the I20 (some may not think this possible with the current platform, but, anything's possible).
4. Design a totally new boat. Not likely, but, again, anything's possible.

What do the rest of you think? Every manufacture has a top line boat in their line up. This should be the prestige boat in the line. And in racing, you want that top boat to be able to kick a** on the race course. How would you advise Hobie on this issue?

David
H20 (still ruminating, 'cause its still winter)

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