Dunno, you are talking about the company that built the TriFoiler, aren't you?
A-Cat makes a lot more sense.
Well were is the Tri-foiler now ? Were is the tri-foiler class ?
The tri-foiler was designed by somebody else and hobie bought the building rights only to discontinue the production (if you can call it that) a few years later.
I think Eric is refering to that. Sure Hobie can plan to come out with a new and totally different class/design but will such a design survive the rigorous HCA One-design mentality. Up to now no boat really has. Even the Tiger F18 has been doing a strenious balancing act between Tiger OD and Tiger F18 where both version really don't compare well anymore.
How will the hobie A-cat fare ? I really don't see a Hobie OD A-cat class coming of the ground. The boats are just too expensive for that while the spinnaker boats aren't as easily beaten by the A-cats as the were in the past. If you slot out 18.000 or more bucks you want to get some good racing in return otherwise there are far cheaper alternatives with about the same speed potential. (just an example Blade F16 for 12.800 US$)
I'm giving Hobie the benefit of the doubt but I really would like to see how Hobie designs and builds there A-cat. This A-cat class is not for an average design team. Their boat will get totally killed by the other A's. This is an all-out no second chances cat class. Take a look at what happened to the Bim javelins and AHPC mark 5 A-cats. Both yards quickly understood what was going on and Bim introduced the Bim XJ and AHPC started building the Flyer; replacing both the javelin and mark 5's. I really don't forsee the Hobie Corp put that much continuity into their A-cat. They will get a design team to design their A-cat and put that design in to production and that is it. No further fine-tuning or modification in the years after that.
A-cats are also rather expensive boats to build. Their traget group are the well of sailors and not the fun-group sailors that is linked to most of the Hobie classes.
In general the A-cat is a totally different ball game then what Hobie is used too. I'm not to sure that they will be able to make the transition.
Looking at the Tri-foiler experiment I see no reason to start believing otherwise.
But this is just my personal opinion.
Wouter