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Rules

Posted By: ncik

Rules - 07/05/08 04:23 AM

Any direct link to "locked in" rules?
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 06:01 AM

To the best of my knowledge

F12 Rules
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 08:16 AM

While I personally don't disagree with those class rule (my design adheres to them) I don't think these were generally accepted by all.

Wouter
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 12:47 PM

Nothing has been generally accepted by all, but these rules are as discussed in a previous thread and I believe define a group of variables that include all the proposed designs. At least all the ones that have been brought into the open. How do we go about formalising these or some alternate rules? Do all the current owner's get a vote? ie. gato only? Do all the owners and people currently building get a vote? Or do we as a group of interested and "like minded" people endeavour to come to a sensible consensus?
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 05:50 PM


We all did agree on 3.80 mtr as maximum overall length for the F12. Of that I'm sure. At least we had I "I agree, lets do that" from all 4 persons must involved with the F12. Retired_Geek, Scarecrow, Phill and myself.

All the rest failed to achieve concensus among even this small group.

I'm still of the opinion that we need a tighter ruleset then that to make this class work and be a succes.

Quote

How do we go about formalising these or some alternate rules?



I think announcement, discussion and (majority) acceptance ON THIS FORUM to be the only way forward at this time.

Currently the group is still small enough to reach a concensus, with passing time the group will grow and make it much harder to get agreement. So I think the basic foundation needs to be lay down as soon as we can. At this time I would include everybody who is (seriously) interested in the discussions and the agreement. Of course some people (builders, designers) will always be a little more important then a "passer-by", but that should really not be a problem apart from some huffing and puffing.

The main point is that we set ourselves a goal of reaching a final agreement by a set time. If we need more time to gain experience then also set a date a year in the future for a large scale final review after which the setup and class are finalized and kept constant over time.

It would be nice to have a more formal review of the boat by gato at this time. Like is 7.0 sq. mtr a good size sail ? How heavy is the boat now and what is the lowest we can achieve with rotomolded hulls.

I'm a little involved in polyethyleen kayaks and these weight about 22 kg for 3.55 mtr length. The volume is not unlike a small cat hull and so it appears that 25 kg per F12 hull in well redevelopped PE (poly-ethyleen) is possible. Pretty much putting the ready to sail F12 at about 70 kg. PE is pretty far developped now in commerical kayaks, these guys have been at it for years now trying to get these as light as possible. PE is VERY abuse resistant.

I'm convinced that the rotomolded PE production of F12's is a huge commericial benefit. Think rentals and cheap production. Typical kayaks go for 600 Euro. Making sub 1500 Euro's for 2 F12 hulls viable. This will still allow the F12 to be commercially available for our targetted low costs.

I think this should be considered when setting a minimal F12 weight. I'm sure a few kg difference is acceptable enough, but not 20 kg (50 kg ply versus 70 kg PE)

Wouter
Posted By: JeffS

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 10:41 PM

Gato came in around 50kg if you put the minimum weight at 70kg (the same weight as an 18ft cat) you will kill the class. Both of my kids cats will be piggybacked on my cat so we can all travel and sail. Minimum weight should be whatever the current lightest F12 is. The rules should be set in concrete ASAP.
regards
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 10:56 PM


Quote

Gato came in around 50kg if you put the minimum weight at 70kg (the same weight as an 18ft cat) you will kill the class.



No we won't kill the class if we set its weight higher then the absolutely minimum that is technical possible. You can build an A-cat for just under 50 kg and still the class is very succesful at 75 kg. Additionally, this is the only 18 ft cat that I know off that even comes close to your quoted 70 kg. But for that feat it is also the most expensive 18 foot catamaran and won't survive any dock ramming.

Remember, whatever we decide for minimum weight now will have a big impact on the F12 future. Set it too low and it will be economically unviable, set it to high and it will be insufficiently attractive. I personally still believe 60 kg min weight as proposed last year and taken up in the provisional class rules is the best compromise.

And I wish to underline again that the only way to make these boats in series for our stated low asking price is by rotomolding. Timber is too prohibitive labour intensive and foam/glass is relatively expensive again because it is labour intensive.

So the question become whether we want a home-builder class or a large class with commercial builders and retailers. If we want to F12 to be trainer for kids and teenagers then we HAVE to build a large class internationally and we simply can do that by homebuilding alone.

Wouter
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/05/08 11:55 PM

But if Gato can build a ply (note he used 4mm not the recommended 3mm) boat under the "minimum" weight then we are by no means setting the weight at the lightest possible, instead I'd say its pretty realistic. A composite boat will be lighter again. No body will invest in rotomolding tooling until the class is established (it make composite tooling look cheap). So Roto moulding will not be the thing that gets the class off the ground.
Posted By: simonp

Re: Rules - 07/06/08 01:14 AM

Quote


I'm a little involved in polyethyleen kayaks and these weight about 22 kg for 3.55 mtr length. The volume is not unlike a small cat hull and so it appears that 25 kg per F12 hull in well redevelopped PE (poly-ethyleen) is possible. Pretty much putting the ready to sail F12 at about 70 kg.


25 kg per hull. <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif" alt="" />

My F16 hulls are lighter than that. I admit they have some pretty fancy work in them but surely and F12 can be lighter than that. The Arafura Cadet have a minimum platform weight of 36kg and that design is 45 years old.

Who is going to carry this 70 kg beast? I still remember how heavy my near minimum weight AC was.

http://www.arrowarafura.com
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/06/08 11:07 AM



Gato,

What was the ready to sail weight of your DS hull and was it made entirely of out 4 mm ply ?

Such data would really help in discussion the possible minimum weight ruling for F12.

With respect to rotomolded production. Indeed this will not start the class, but it will be a huge benefit in growing it at a later time. Even, our competition, the dinghies are increasingly going for rotomoulded production and we must not let them get an advantage over us. Same with Kayaks, We have got to set ourselves up to compete effectively with these.

Again, I'm not very concerned about the roto stuff being a little heavier then the optimized F12, but not by alot. I think a 60 kg = min with roto at 70 kg could be a very attractive setup.

Wouter
Posted By: ncik

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 05:21 AM

Why do new cat classes generally have fully rigged minimum weights? Why not platform weights (hulls, beams, tramps). Most dinghy classes only have hull weights.

Positives for platform only minimum weights:
- From a designers point of view it is much easier to perform an accurate weight estimate with fewer items.
- Easier to measure at regattas.
- Better promotional aspect because the advertising has the lighter weight stated.

If the F12 is to be car topable then this is the weight ppl are interested in.

Thanks for the link. I'm gonna with with that for the moment.
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 05:30 AM

ncik,

I like full weight as this is what you need to design to anyway. Also it gives a better equality between boats for example if we set a platform weight of say 36kg (as per the Arafura) then two boats turned up one with and one without a carbon mast then there would be a big difference in final weights. Having a total weight means we don't have to over complicate the rules and limit choices.

I can't wait to see what you come up with. Let me know if I can help.
Posted By: JeffS

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 07:54 AM

How is a kid going to get 70kg on top of mums car, launch and retrieve it themselves. Professional builders could turn out foam F12's in no time with a jig. My boats will never be 70kg and you can't grandfather out the first boats that launch the class, we don't even know what RG and Phil will come up with yet. Whatever these boats come in at is the class standard for me.
Posted By: simonp

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 09:38 AM

Totally agree Jeff.

While I am a little ways off building one of these yet (kids are 2 and 6 months). I can certainly see one sitting on top of the blade in a few years time. I think a 70kg F12 will struggle against the 50kg arafura's in australia too.

The reason I am so interested in the project is because it is what I wanted when I was sailing the AC. Modern hull shape (back then it was the A Class/Taipan/Nacra/AO), high aspect mainsail, daggerboards, two on trapeze. I designed lots of these as a kid and even made a model one. My design also had an asymmetric spinnaker which I copied from the 18 foot skiffs. Everybody laughed at me at the thought of a spinnaker on catamaran.
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 09:47 AM

My prefered solution to the whole rules thing is to confirm the box as described in the above attachment (see poll threads) and then when a certain number of boats have been launched hand the whole thing over to the people who own the boats to discuss and vote on finalising the rules. In the weight thread I suggested that this should be set at 10 boats. Together the owners of these boats will have spent approx $20-30k and they deserve the right to shape the class's future a lot more than a group of people chatting on a sailing forum.

None of the boats currently being built are carbon rule beaters they are all being home built with "reasonable" levels of technology as is my understanding of the original concept of the class and none of these people are going to vote in a minimum weight so low that it makes their boats worthless.

Maybe an alternative to waiting until a certain number of boats are built is to wait for a certain number of designs to be built (3 or 4) as this will then give a good sample size upon which to base decisions.
Posted By: Gato

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 12:05 PM

My boat ended up at 52 kgs, and I did not hunt weight and it's 4mm all over. Think you could get down to 40 kg if really trying.
Rather 50 kg than 70 kg, 20 kg is a lot to carry around.
I have had some more kids sailing the boat and the rest seems all right.
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 02:05 PM

Personally I'm quite happy to stay at 60 kg (as we are now), halveways so to say.



My design is still using alu beams and alu mast. It can use carbon tubing but a new standard alu alloy is taking over the market that is just strong enough for usage in beams and masts.

Its 6060-T6 / AlMgSi 0.5 F22 with a garanteed minimum elasticity boundery (0.2%) value of 160 MPa.

It is cheap, very corrosion resistant, sufficiently hard and quickly becoming THE standard alloy that even local common household hardware stores are stocking (even when they don't know it). The 0.2% boundery is just enough to use it for a unstayed mast, but the final test this winter will tell.

Currently, I'm testing axles made from this variety and they are holding up extremely well. That is they have hold up under a 120 kg pilot getting himself airborn and landing on a hardsurface; among other things..

I have just purchased 18 mtr tubing of 6060-T6 for 140 Euro's. That, I call cheap. I've also bought two unstayed alu masts of 5.5 mtr length ready to take a sleeved sail for a total cost of 250 Euro's = 125 Euro's per mast. The sleeved sail for it (currently 5.5 sq. mtr. area for the initial test) was 400 Euro's. Basically, (collapsable) mast, sail+battens, and boom+ fork was a total of 750 Euro's INCLUDING shipping.

Indeed, I have no money to play with at this time, but somebody is giving me a small sponsorship for landyachting. I'm using this to also do some testing on the setup I'm planning for the F12.

Anyway, I'm quite happy to start off the minimum ready to sail 60 kg (possibly with corrector weights) and when a 4 mm ply + all alu boat can be build at 50 kg then we can always lower this value.

I have never campaigned for a 70 kg minimum weight, that is just assumed by others who don't read the posts very closely. I have campaigned for not getting to far away from what can be had by rotomoulding and for not setting the limit at what is technically possible but economically unviable.

Wouter
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 02:26 PM



Scarecrow,

How much volume is enclosed in your hulls ?


Wouter
Posted By: billby

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 09:44 PM

The papertiger class 4.267m built in ply has a class weight of 50kg i have built one of these in ply at 43kg (low tec) we are building the RGcats in NZ (mid tec)these have to be easy to transport ,rig,launch,sail,have fun, for the kids any heavy dog!!!! will not get the right message across sailing is fun and easy. i want my son to be able to get the reward of preparing and launching the boat himself.not having to rely on somone else.my opinion for what it is whorth 45kg min it wont stop heavyer being compeditive. by the way will be building a ply vershion on the gig to compare
bill
Posted By: simonp

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 10:02 PM

Hi Billby,

are you suggesting 45kg all up or platform only?
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 10:11 PM


Do what you must guys.

Personally I don't any kid carry 45 kg by himself either, let alone take it off the roof rack by himself. That is just not the way these things work. But more importantly I don't see many commercial builders go for a 45 kg boat and garantee/warrantee it too. Technically they can but commercially they won't.

I know that cat classes in Aus and NZ have typically build featherweight boats, but sadly none ever broke through internationally. Surely their light weights should have made these classes extremely hot.

I learned to rig and sail on a 750 kg sailboat when I was 12 and the fun wasn't any less for it.

The most popular dinghies for kids and teenagers (up to 16 years of age) are the optimist, splash and laser radial at respectively ready to sail weights of 45kg, 70kg and 80kg. I have never seen the kids handle these boats all by themselves.

We had this discussion many times before and the class will fail on this discussion over and over again. At some point you have got to make a decision. Go for a small 30 kg homebuilder class with main focus in NZ and Aus, or go for a fully international class and make concessions to allow for full growth and allow commercial builders to keep their pants in one piece.

I think I'm sounding like a broken record by now so I'll stop.

Wouter
Posted By: JeffS

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 10:43 PM

A kid can drag their own weight no problem my 8yo at 45kg can drag 45kg. There is always going to be adult assistance when water and kids is involved but at 45kg a mum can help and be involved in the club or sail themselves. Hobie already has production 12 footers that fit within the F12 box rule, that are heavy and presumably their margins are tight to sell them. So I'm going to do what the original plan was thats build a light, modern looking, uncomplicated, easy to rig cat that suits the kids and myself. At 45kg or 50kg Arafura cadets can compete in F12 races and if that gets more kids sailing then its right.
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/07/08 11:08 PM

Billby, the 50kg weight for the PT is platform only. The all up boat would be approx 65kg (I was corrected on this in a earlier thread).

Wouter, I can't help but think you are playing word games. The only person who has mentioned a 30kg boat is you. we're all talking around 45-55kg depending on what THE ACTUAL BOATS COME OUT AT.

Since I know you like numbers here are some.

3mm Gaboon DS12 kit 12kg (includes hull skins, bulkheads and longitudinal ring frame)

4mm Gaboon DS12 kit 15kg.

Note. this kit has been designed for easy almost "measurement free" construction and at least 2 kg could be cut out of it if you were looking to save weight.

Weight of glass/ resin / bog in DS 12 approx 4-5kg (much of this could be eliminated but has been included to make the boat more robust)

Carbon mast like Gatos 6kg rigged (his number not mine)

Aluminium mast rigged 6-7kg rigged (depending on selected section)

Weight of beams 4kg

etc etc.

Even the 4mm boat shouldn't come out at much over 50kg.

Rather than theorising build a boat and see where you come out. If you need a hand send me your geometry and I'll generate some cutfiles for you.
Posted By: Luiz

Re: Rules - 07/08/08 04:43 AM

Gentlemen,

This group defined the F12 as a global multihull class for kids; that we want to bring kids to multihull sailing, that rationality and common sense shall prevail and that low cost, simplicity, safety and ease of assembly/disassembly are good goals, among other things. As a consequence, some measurements have been agreed on. Now we are focusing on minimum weight.

This is how I summarize the facts:

• A rotomolded F12 would be less expensive for mass production.
• A rotomolded F12 using today’s technology would weight around 70 kg.
• The rotomolded F12 would be more convenient to clubs, resorts and some individuals.
• The weight (and other) constraints associated to rotomolding will change over time.

…on the other hand,

• The ply or glass/foam home built F12s are today’s reality.
• The first home built boat weighted 52 kg. Its hull and foils were built with conservative methods/materials and the mast with carbon. From this boat alone it would seem that 50 kg is a reasonable number.
• Light boats are easier to transport and handle. They also perform well.
• Transport is a greater issue for home builders than for resorts and clubs.

Also:

• Rotomolding or other mass production technique will be possible after the class starts to grow steadily. It could take a year, ten years or forever.
• Scarecrow would like to have fixed rules as soon as possible.
• Wouter wants to keep this forum as the decision center.

I would like to offer the following:

• If everything could be planned and calculated from the start and written in concrete, it would be done already. It didn’t happen in the past and it is unlikely to happen now. Instead of chasing the elusive ‘greater truth’, I guess we should focus on how to make the class grow now.
• If I’d build today, I wouldn’t care about the minimum weight, only about the (perceived) optimum balance between economy, safety and light weight.
• It is useless to tell homebuilders that the minimum weight is X. If they want lighter boats, they will build them their way and add ballast only if and when the class grows enough to organize a race with boats of different weights in their area.
• Inexpensive rotomolded boats would be great, but how long will it take until we can have them built? What will be the achievable weight at that time? I believe we don’t know the answers.
• We are not an industry designing a new product; we are nurturing a class that will evolve. It is following an evolutionary path, so things will change over time.
• We can not predict the future. As a consequence, we don’t know what the ‘final’ minimum weight will be, when an intelligent adjustment will be required or who will be in charge at that time.
• Boat weights can be predicted with reasonable accuracy and the entire discussion can be based on one boat and calculations, but why do we have to do it right now? I’d rather have a few boats of each type sailing before taking the decision about the first minimum weight. The figure seems to be unnecessary until F12s of different designs race against each other. I suggest we postpone the discussion until that time. This would give more freedom to designers and builders and will improve our chances to achieve a better decision.
• If for any reason we must decide now, it would be best if the four designers agree on a safe number for boats built with the lowest and cheapest technology/materials they are willing to recommend for home building. Today I guess it would be between 40 and 60 kg.

I'm on vocation sailing with the family, with limited access to the net. It may take a while until I read answers.

All the best,
Luiz
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/08/08 04:53 AM

Luiz,

Excellent post. The reason I'm advocating "committing" to a set of rules is because of the feedback I'm getting from many of the people who have requested copies of the DS12 plans. Few people want to build a boat that may become a white elephant. Its also worth noting that I'm only advocating a temporary minimum weight until the class has enough critical mass and data points to make an informed decision.

Billby how far of are the Vudus? A second data point would be very usefull at this time. Do you have a finished hull you can weigh?
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/08/08 09:53 AM

Quote

Rather than theorising build a boat and see where you come out. If you need a hand send me your geometry and I'll generate some cutfiles for you.



I'm not theorising, remember I was the first one to produce a fully detailed listing of components and weights.

http://www.xs4all.nl/~whijink/F12/

http://www.xs4all.nl/~whijink/F12/F12_weight_and_cost_push_setup.xls

I found that things do tend to add up. Granted, I did include some margins here and there because amateurs and builders of series will typically not be extremely focussed on working very cleanly (light) but rather tend to be lazy or pressed for time (labour costs)

And my arguement revolves completely around the expected need to attract commercial builders to the F12 class and concept in order to succeed in our goal for the F12 to become THE youth/teenage trainer for larger cats and a viable alternative to youth/teenager dinghies.


Still, I would be happy to go for a very low ready to sail weight if it can be proven that such a setup is economically viable in a commercial sense. Gato's build DS's is indeed a good example of a robust boat (glassed over 4 mm ply), but building in ply is not really commercially viable at this time, mostly because high quality ply is getting more and more rare. Bending straight foam/glass panels or rotomolding are alot more viable economically in the long run. But foam/glass plates need relatively high density foam to avoid easy denting.

What I'm trying to do here it is underscore the long term effects the choice for a minimal ready to sail weight can have. We need to look at several different building methods and strike a good balance between all of these.


But indeed, if you all decide to go for a low number then I will submit myself to that. For my own frame I need all the weight savings in the boat I can get !

Wouter
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/08/08 10:13 AM



Two reactions.

I'm with Scarecrow here on setting an initial minimum weight and re-evaluating it at a later time.

Also I feel it is very important to reach an agreement on the class rules soon, even if some values may be subject to change at a later time. At least the general setup, structure and a pretty accurate "feel" for the values should be set. Currently we still have the change to do it the easy way. Once several 10's of boats, plans have been build c.q. sold the discussion will only get alot harder. For this reason I'm personally very willing to compromise on any values.

I strongly prefer to start relatively high and adjust it downwards later, this is alot easier to enforce at a later time as a heavier boat will always be compliant under any new rules. This is pure an organisational benefit.


With respect to rotomoulding. I think the technology is readily available at this time. I had a look over the state of things in the Kayak sector and the shaping c.q. detailing that can be had with rotomoulding these days is quite impressive. Currently in kayaks, builders make one design and produce the same product both in glass laminates and rotomoulded PE. There is no design difference in shape left.

For us it could be as easy as going to a rotomoulded kayak producer with any of the existing F12 designs and buy into their expertise and tooling. The hard part at this time is to find a party willing to invest in this and that requires economic viability.

Wouter
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/08/08 10:25 AM

Quote

If you need a hand send me your geometry and I'll generate some cutfiles for you.



That is a very welcome offer.

I do really like what you have done with the DS12. A very nice building plan and the hard chined hull looks every bit as modern as a compound curve hull shape.

Up to this time I have mostly concentrated on other aspects of the F12 design then hulls. And I do lack the experience with software to calculate the cutfiles. I can learn of course but I don't have to time to invest in that right now. So yes indeed, any help in this department will be warmly welcomed. Besides, I have to get down with several new software packages relating to my research assignment already, at one point enough is enough !

Also I want to proof the unstayed rig concept first before doing hull optimizing. I may even just use one of the currently available hull plans if I managed to gether the investment for a prototype.

Personally, I like the DS-12 best but I want it to be capable enough for a 90 kg body frame and have a tall bow section. The conditions over here are quite choppy and a low bow simply does not work as well as a taller one; that experience I gethered from the F16's. There doesn't have to be volume high up in the bow as long as the deck stays above the surface. When the deck submerges then something changes significantly enough for the dive to suddenly aggrevate. Fine decks help but not enough. Also I would like a sufficiently strong stern to take T-foil rudders and a high enough freeboard to have the beams clear the small chop. Apart from those items pretty much any hullshape will do.

Wouter
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/08/08 10:36 AM

Wouter,

give a plan, profile and midship section in ACAD or similar and I'll make time to do the rest.
Posted By: ncik

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 01:24 AM

There hasn't been much talk of the tried and tested dinghy construction method of single skin fibreglass. This to me seems like a very viable alternative for mass production purposes, particularly compared with ply or cored composite construction. Home builders could also produce a single skin hull easier than a cored hull. Chined, semi-chined and compound curvature hulls can all be produced with single skin composite construction.

Admittedly it doesn't have the weight saving benefits of a cored composite, but this is only a small boat so significant weight savings are going to be hard to find with material changes alone.

Scarecrow, what is your basic hull surface area? (I haven't started a design yet.)
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 02:40 AM

3.7 sq.m per hull. Yes single skin is definately an option just a little more work from a tooling point of view.

if you go through the old threads there is one with both my and RG's hydrostatics.
Posted By: ncik

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 05:13 AM

Thanks mate. A preliminary weight estimate looks promising from that info.

I'll probably incorporate a wet layup single skin into any design I do. I've got some ideas to put forward for construction as well...just to make life easier. After the mould is constructed, the aim is for a hull popped out in a day, or atleast the hull halves. Just need to sort out the beam mounts now.
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 05:35 AM

Why not glass in a plate and tap the fwd ones and then just use a shed load of glass aft.
Posted By: Gato

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 07:07 AM

Scarecrow, do you have the drawings of the roung bilged hull ready? In that case I could have a go at a round bilged hull in foam/glass (stripplanking), and make mould of that one to be able to make production if needed.
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 09:13 AM

Gato,

If you want to do one let me know I'll need a couple of days to tidy up the model. Its very preliminary.

If we do one we should call it the "hug and kisses, cherry blossom 12"

Edit...

Actually what we should do is I'll work with Ncik (if he's interested) to develop his design and you could build it. That way we'll get more ideas and designers into the class.
Posted By: Wouter

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 03:25 PM


Guys,

It seems the voting for our basic set of class rule values is going very well.

Basically, we have no votes against the following values :

max length = 3.80 mtr
max width = 2.00 mtr
max sail area = 7.00 mtr.
min ready to sail weight = 60 kg plus a review of this value at a later time and after gaining more practical experience.

I think we must thank Scarecrow for giving the class rules discussion another try at exactly the right time. Well done mate. It looks likes this time we are going to reach a consensus.

This setup is already a pretty good box rule. Anybody want to add another limit to the rules. I'm thinking about introducing a max mast height to close the box off in the vertical sense. This will make all F12 very close in general appearence and general performance. Also avoid extremely high aspect sails that are difficult to trim, not something we want in a trainer class for impatient youths and teenagers.

Scarecrow, maybe you can make a last ballot on mast length. I proper 6 mtr because that is a nice round number (+ comparable to the Laser dinghy) and appears to sit right in comparison with the other specs.

Wouter
Posted By: JeffS

Re: Rules - 07/09/08 08:16 PM

My boats, Gatos, RG's wont be F12's then Im not going to add a bag of concrete so that my kids can race.
Posted By: ncik

Re: Rules - 07/10/08 02:59 AM

A preliminary look at the Optimist rules indicates that they weigh about 45kg ready to sail. 35kg min hull weight (with bouyancy bags), approx 10kg rig???

The F12 is a bigger boat with a similar structural integrity requirement and bigger rig so it should be expected to weigh a bit more. A 50-60kg rigged weight with a corresponding platform weight of about 40-45kg does not seem an unreasonable minimum weight range at this early stage of the class.

Does this match up with Gato's experience?

Optimist Rules
Posted By: Anonymous

Re: Rules - 07/10/08 03:51 AM

Ncik,

working backwards...

Gato's finished boat 52 kg so the platform weight would be apprx 40kg. From memory his hulls are approx 15kg each
Posted By: Gato

Re: Rules - 07/10/08 01:47 PM

Scarecrow, knock something down with Nick and I give it a try.
To have a fair chanse to have it in the water when we still have the green "winter" I need something to start with beg. August.
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