Friday, March 29, 2013

United States East Coast World Championship Bid for 2016/2017

The last 505 World Championship to be hosted in the US East Coast was in 1998 at Hyannis, Massachusetts. The US West Coast has hosted two World Championships since then (2004 and 2009). All three events were won by American Teams:


1998 - Nick Trotman and Mike Mills

2004 - Morgan Larson and Trevor Bayliss

2009 - Mike Martin and Jeff Nelson

The 505 Class Officers have determined that the US will be officially proposing an East Coast venue for the 2016 World Championship at the 2014 Annual General Meeting (AGM) to be held at Kiel. If the proposal is not selected for the 2016 Worlds, the class will seek selection for 2017. The American Section has requested the opportunity to voice this intention in Barbados at the 2013 AGM.  The American Section will be conducting its own evaluation process of East Coast venues over the summer and intends to have a selected venue by end of September 2013, to ensure that there is an organized and unified proposal to present in Germany during 2014.

Currently, there are two venues that have been identified as potential locations for this 2016/17 Worlds proposal:


1. Annapolis, MD - Severn Sailing Association - Fall, Exact Dates TBD



Jesse Falsone has lead the preliminary efforts to put this proposal together. Preliminary planning has commenced with the following actions taken:
  • Approval by the SSA Board of Governors to host the championship in Fall 2016 (exact dates TBD)
  • Endorsement and promise of support by local 505 fleets within USA Region II (Annapolis, West River, Hampton), and from USA Region I (New York and New England)
  • Preliminary assessment of needs including but not limited to event management, race management  transportation, and housing.
  • Formation of an Organizing Committee as specified in the Championship Rules

2. Newport, RI - Sail Newport - Late Summer, Exact Dates TBD



Doug McKiege has engaged Sail Newport regarding their interest in hosting the event. Only limited planning for this venue has been completed at this stage:
  • Sail Newport has indicated strong interest in support of hosting this event
  • Several class members have endorsed this venue as a strong candidate for a World Championship, however, no Organizing Committee has been formed at this stage

The 2013 American Section AGM will serve as the forum for final discussion of these venues before they are put to formal ballot for all paid American Section members. The goal is to put forward the strongest proposal possible to bring the World Championships back to the US East Coast and hopefully another American team on top of the podium.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

Virtual Debrief on Dustin and Mike Video from Midwinters

Interesting video and follow-up discussion from the email list:



Bryan Richardson:

Was hoping to generate some lessons learned from the video of Holt and Dustin sailing downwind in race 7 down in FL.  These gopro cameras will be almost as good as a coach boat for those of us trying to get better.

Dustin and Mike, you guys are pretty sick out there on the water and the rest of us would like to starting chasing your heels a bit more.  As a crew trying to get better, I watched you guys to take note of your your movements in tacks and gybes.  Couple of questions for both you and Mike.

Dustin, right at the beginning, we get to see you do your last tack as you approach the windward mark (about 30 seconds in).  Was watching how you unhook, and then grab the new jib sheet in your forward hand as you are crossing under the boom, and carry it with you to the new side.  It looks like on that tack that you cranked it most of the way in on the new side before hooking up and stepping out.  Is that usual or do you typically clip up, step out, and then haul it in to the new trim.
Dustin and Mike, on your raise (at about a minute in), you have a system where Dustin raises the kite halyard.  Do you guys like this system?  Why did you choose it rather than Mike hoisting?
If I saw correctly, it also looks like the lines for the pole launcher come back to Mike and he actually launches the kite on the raise.  Do you guys like this system?  Pros and cons to Dustin pushing it out on the raise? You have a system on your boat where Mike blows the pole on the jybe.  What do you think of this system?

Small thing, I noticed that Mike uncleats the jib and recleats the new side on the jib before you go into the jybe.  Do you have the lines run in any special way to do that or can he usually grab them.  Would he do that in heavy breeze?

Dustin was watching your hook up and go technique on the gybes (take 7:20 as an example). Once you are on the new tank, it looks like you grab the ring by the top and just pull it toward your hook and it is about the right height to snap in.  In looking at your hook, it seems to sit higher on your stomach than mine does.  I would say my hook is just under my belly button.  Does your hook sit higher on your stomach?

Mike, Jesse made this comment as well on the youtube page, but I noticed that you sail with a fair amount of helm and are active in pumping the main close to centerline downwind.  You also seem to go through the gybes pretty quickly.  Does your kite stay all the way filled through the gybe while turning more quickly?  Can you talk about what you are doing with your weight and what you are taking note of on your sails as you drive?

Eager to hear Jesse, Ali, Ethan, and Macy and anyone else chime in with their observations as well.  Sailors, trying to get better, there are no dumb questions so chime in as you need!

Jesse Falsone:


When wire-to-wire tacking, crew should uncleat, unhook, then swing into the boat. If you hold onto the trap handle a bit longer, you can get that back foot over the cap and onto the other side of the boat. This allows you to face forward in the boat, grab the new big sheet at the cleat and rotate up onto the new tank. As you rotate, you trim the jib in and get it into the cleat. Then, grab the trap ring, jam it into the hook, and throw your body out over the rail. Driver should be sitting on the tank at this time and
trimming the main in as the crew goes out. Don't trim before if you can help it. Going out on the wire "up-hill" is more difficult and slower.

The crew hoist is pretty good, but I found that the driver really has to pre-launch the pole if possible to speed things up. Get it half way out before rounding and doing a bear-away set. Driver also should be the one to release the trap twing (since they have nothing else to do on the hoist). So, it should be easily reachable.

Mike Holt:


I will answer the helm appropriate ones…

2. Back at the Worlds in 2011 in Hamo, Peter and Hasso out set Carl and me with Peter pulling up. With twin poles this is certainly quicker, if done right. The following are the important parts.

a. Minimum friction. The set up has to be completely clean, minimum turns best possible blocks.

b. Helm has to pre set the pole and launch as far as possible as the kite goes up

c. As you approach the mark, pull sheets, guy and halyard as far as you dare.

3. What I do is reach under the jib sheets and pull the pole out as far as I can and leave the line by my hand. Then keep pulling as I can, I also try and grab the sheet, primarily to stop it going over the boom.

4. Yes, nothing special but an important part of a smooth gybe, unclear the jib and windward sheet the "new" one. Stops the pole from being hindered on the new set.

6. Two parts here:

a. Downwind. I drink too much coffee. I think I am pretty aggressive all the time steering and sheeting, up, down all the time. Many years ago, sailing in England I came off of a start next to Peter Colclough (aka God) and he just sailed away, I watched and emulated. Through the 70's and 80's he was a league apart. In my mind, although the tiller and therefore the rudder is moving a lot, I don't feel weight, I believe I am letting the rudder move to the boat and waves, if that makes sense, we are not sailing on flat water and steady breeze, we are sailing on a bumpy track with shifty breeze.

b. Gybes. So I blow the pole, have done for years, mainly because it is easier, I am lazy. It is also way safer, firstly, less chance of a pole in the face, secondly we initiate the turn with the crew on the wire, so the boat is going fast and you can turn faster. Much less loader and yes the kite stays full most of the time. Out of the gybe I reach in and pull hard on the new sheet. I think Dustin liked it.

Dustin Romey:


Here's a shot at your questions below:

Funny you say that.  I went out really slowly on this tack.  If you can read lips you'll see Mike was calmly suggesting that I might wish to get out on the wire more quickly (you know, in that formal English proper way).  I thought we were closer to the mark than we were.  Jesse's right, the fastest tacks are when your back foot goes all the way across the boat to the other side of the CB.  I'd say I do that most of the time, but not always in crash tacks.  I'll pull an upwind clip and post it and we'll see.  Aside from that, if you grab the jib sheet from the cleat and then walk across the boat, its pretty much trimmed into roughly the right spot.  I do that and then clip in on the rail and push out on the wire.

I don't think we had the fastest sets.  We added a bunch of McLube and that helped, as it usually does.  Crew hoists can be faster, but another big gain is that the driver gets to drive.  That way they can focus on where they should be relative to the other boats.  The same thing you get out of the crew douse.
He was either grabbing it after the last tack and pulling it back to his area, or I was pulling it out 2 feet and throwing the launcher line back to him before I went to the halyard.  Probably 75% of the time he had launched it fully by the time I had the halyard up.  Which let me just grab the sheet, clip in, and go.
Mike does that pretty quickly.  With Henry, I tend to play the jib more.  Driver's preference.  Mike was actually complaining that my jib sheets were too long because on his boat when Carl is out on the wire and aft (like in a windy kite reach), the jib sheet is stretched out in front of him.  Funny enough, Henry and I lengthened them at the NAs since when its windy you want to be able to flog the jib when you're standing at the back of the boat.

I'd call it an inch or two above my bellybutton.  Not sure it matters much, as long as the harness is comfortable, and you can hook in quickly. When I wore the Spinshop harness, I wore it much more loose; loose enough that I could roll around in it to look around upwind.  That worked with that harness, the Ronstan style isn't comfortable that way, so I wear it much tighter.

Just to give my perspective on this question, I thought the kite stayed full in most of our gybes.  Mike stayed going down a wave longer than I'm used to.  That meant that everything was unloaded for most of the maneuver.  Which probably contributed to your comment about how fast the pole went out.
The boat-handling thing that was really different with Mike was that he was releasing the pole launcher in the jibes.  This meant that I wasn't focusing on releasing the pole when I swung in.  I could focus on getting under the boom and pulling the new pole out.  I liked it, but wonder what it looks like outside the boat.  It certainly didn't feel slow.

Chris Brady:


Pole trip for the driver...?  No one would move their weight forward before the gybe.

If my back foot doesn't cross in a tack, it means I am late and doing the "hop". If this happens in any kind of breeze I go straight to the wire regardless of where the jib is.  Having a flat boat out of a tack with a loose jib is far better then a totally stalled boat on it's side.

Dustin Romey:


I asked him why not rig a trip, and he said every time he's tried it, the trip releases when you don't want it to.  He just grabs the launcher line and whips it upwards.  Its a little athletic as far as most drivers go, but effective.

Weight-wise, it makes a lot of sense.  The crew stays on the wire longer, helping the turn.  And you never come through the jibe without the pole having released (no crossed poles).  No one gets the pole in the face. The new pole goes out faster because you're going directly to the new pole.  Not sure what Jesse thought when they sailed the NAs, but I'm a fan.

Interesting point on just going for the wire first in a bad tack.  Thinking about it, I probably worry about the jib too much.

Jesse Falsone:


I think the driver blowing the pole with the crew on the wire is fine for heavy air, but I don't think it's as good in marginal wire running. it's not as smooth and I think the boat slows down too much in the tighter turn. I prefer a slower, smoother turn in those conditions. It would be interesting to see which is faster down a run.

Stergios Papadakis:


We use a trip, I think it is the best way to go.  The trip line, which has a ball on the end, goes through a fairlead behind the mainsheet cleat and runs forward under the CB cap.  The launcher lines go through spinlocks mounted cleat-down on flipflops on the mast.  To prevent unintended trips, there is a shock cord that pulls the trip line forward near the mast under the CB cap, right before the trip line turns to come up through the CB cap and to the cleats.  This holds the ball tight against the fairlead.  In order to trip I need to stretch the shock cord some (maybe 4-6”) before the trip line can be tensioned and pull on the spinlocks.  The two spinlocks are connected by a line with a block on it, the trip line the skipper pulls connects to the block, resulting in a 1:2 purchase, so it requires a bit of a tug.  It never releases unintentionally.

The trip happens right before the crew swings in, as I am steering down. In breeze, it is a smooth turn all the way through the boom coming over, and the kite stays full through the boom coming over.  In some conditions it works to stay low and the kite stays full until the pole goes out, in other conditions it is safer and faster to head up and let it luff rather than drop off the plane on a dead run with both people standing in the middle of the boat and the CB down.

In light-air run-run gybes, it is much smoother to have the crew bring the pole back more slowly.







Monday, March 11, 2013

St. Francis Yacht Club Spring Dinghy - Mike Holt Report

Another well written report here from Mike Holt:




The weekend of March 9/10 saw a large 505 fleet descend on St Francis for the first Northern California event of the year. Conditions looked pretty benign as we rigged, bright sunshine, warm temperatures and no wind, not a breath. AP went up and it looked like we may have a long wait, but soon after the flag went up the breeze filled in. By the time we got out a steady 15 knots was blowing under the Golden Gate and on to the Alcatraz race track.

PRO Tony Chargin and his team set a two lap windward/leeward course and off we went, with a big, no huge ebb tide running underneath us. Jeff and Mike sailing their new ship showed their usual dominant performance while behind the rest of us scraped for what we could get. With the breeze building there were lots of place changes and the onus was on speed and tactics downwind, max breeze and minimum current were the decisions you needed to get right. Lots of teams had their moments but the outcome of the weekend became clear pretty quickly. Jeff and Mike won race 1, from Andy and Howie, Ted Conrads, crewing for me managed to use our slight stature to out run Rob sailing this weekend with Jeff. The pattern stayed the same for the rest of the day although Andy and Howie managed to break Jeff and Mike’s run for a perfect score by winning race 2 and Justin and JB managed to grab a 3rd in race 3. Also going quick were Mathias and Aaron with Rich and Bob keeping CAN well represented.

Sunday started out the same as Saturday, sunny and no breeze and it should have been no surprise that we had a carbon copy on our hands. Today though we spent our time checking out the two very new, very shiny Waterats. Gorgeous pieces of art. Also it appears fast. On queue the breeze filled in and again was up to 15+ by the time racing started. No change and the front, Jeff and Mike winning with Ted and me scrapping 2nd in front of Andy and Howie.

By the second race the wind had ratcheted up a little and the ebb was in full effect. With everyone wanting a committee boat start chaos and a general recall were the inevitable outcome. Once underway a huge course had been set, Jeff and Mike disappearing over the horizon as had the windward mark. Having been sailing for several hours without seeing any sign of the two marks and the boats ahead of us bearing away without rounding a mark, Ted and I came to the conclusion maybe it was a 1 lap race. Almost simultaneously it seemed everyone agreed and bore away and set kites for a very long run back to the finish. Ted and I got there 1st followed by Justin and JB. However debate raged and in first and last place at the end of the discussion were Jeff and Mike who “claimed” to have rounded a rib with some friendly people claiming to be a “mark”. Personally we rounded a seal that barked out a similar statement… As it was it made no difference to the final results.

The final race got underway with a slight reduction in numbers, but no change to the normal finishing positions, which I won’t bore you with here.

So a great start to the season, St Francis living up to their reputation for supplying all the required ingredients, wind, sun, race track and free beer.

Results:

1. Jeff Nelson/Mike Martin 9106. 1,2,1,1,1,1
Sailed a great regatta, very fast up and down, completely dominant. Shame the boat isn’t measured and they have to give up the nice Patagonia tops they “won”.

2. Andy Zinn/Howie Hamlin 8762 2,1,2,3,DNF,2
Fast up but unusually suspect downwind, something I am sure they will address before Barbados!

3. Ted Conrads/Mike Holt 8680 3,3,7,2,DNF,3
Slow up fast down, mainly due to weight issues. Ted made all the right calls downwind to keep us in the game.

4. Rob Woelfel/Jeff Miller 9082 4,5,6,5,DNF,4
Getting faster and faster as the weekend went on, especially downwind. The new boat is looking good!

5. Rich Mundel/Bob Tennant 9009 8,7,4,7,DNF,5
Rich and Bob were going pretty good at times and with some better starts could have been fighting for a top 3.

6.  Reeve Dunn/Holt Condon 8559 7,9,9,4,DNF,7
These two have certainly upped their game and show great speed at times, once they connect the dots they will be formidable.

7. Justin Shaffer/JB Turney 9042 9,4,3,9,DNF, DNF
Another team with their moments and good speed, practice will be their friend and with some hours under their belt we could see some changes at the front of the fleet.

8. Mathias Kennerknect/Aaron Ross 7156 5,10,5,6,DNF, DNF
Showing good pace and making few mistakes one less alphabet score would have seen them much higher up the results.

9. Jay Miles/Eb Russell 9004 13, 8, 8, 10, DNF, 9
Another team sailing well, but not crossing the line in the position they would have liked but mixing it at up at the front when all was going well.

10. Blaine Pedlow/AJ Crane 8854 6,11,DNF, 11, DNF, 6
Blaine and AJ were flying upwind at times and AJ clearly proving that you don’t have to be the biggest helm to be fast in SF.

11. Evan and Pat Diola 7611 11, 12, DNF, DNF, DNF, 8
Easily the lightest team out there but getting around the track well and looking good doing it too!

12. Peter Alarie/Hasso Platner 8965 10,6,DNF, 8, DNF, DNF
Going fast a lot of the time but wishing we were sailing some where warmer I think. The car show was an added bonus.

13. Piper Dunlap 8868 14,14,10,12, DNF, DNF
These guys probably thought SF in March would be a mellower place but sailed well to get around in tough conditions.

14. Paul VonGrey/Krysia Pohl 12,13,DNF,13, DNF, DNF
Another PNW team that probably would have liked to see less breeze but again did well getting around the race track.

15. Ian O’leary 7069
Entered and I saw him at the briefing but not on the water.

15. Antoine Laussu 6984
Another no show, where were you?

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Installing a Larger Spinnaker Tube on Van Munster USA 8822 by Dave Burchfiel


Dave Burchfiel did a great job installing a larger launcher tube in his pre-preg carbon Van Munster. Check out the full article on the class webpage:

http://www.usa505.org/rigging/spinnaker-tube-8822


Also, make sure you Like Us On Facebook for up-to-the minute class news.