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#1831
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| Oh...sorry I forgot myself for a moment. |
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#1832
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| lol..Dont worry Crag, a few of us got it ![]()
__________________ Imagination is more important than knowledge. -Einstein |
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#1833
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| Quote:
![]() Curious how the parameters of the MacCrap change when the tank is full/empty... also curious as to what the hull of this thing actually is made of, as we have one around here and it seems to flex against the fenders a bit too much to be all fibreglass.
__________________ - Matt Marsh - Marsh Design (small craft blog and designs) |
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#1834
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| 1/8 inch of chopper gun layup flexes a lot. ![]() |
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#1835
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| According to sailingscuttlebutt today (actually an excerpt from Daily Sail): Quote:
) conspiracy against proper sailboat design and training in the US??? ![]() |
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#1836
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| Remember Frank qoutes "Facts" not facts ..... |
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#1837
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| Hello I'm new to this. Reads interesting. |
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#1838
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| Reads bizarre to me. |
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#1839
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| Bizzare? Maybe.... I usually reserve that term for basement-inventor articles claiming to have solved the problem of perpetual motion, thus redefining all of thermodynamics in one fell swoop. Thankfully we don't see too much of that stuff here. On another note... new TP52s for $1.9 M, ready to sail? Somehow I thought they were more than that... time to start saving up, I guess ![]()
__________________ - Matt Marsh - Marsh Design (small craft blog and designs) |
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#1840
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| MacGregor 26's definitely reside in the realm outside the influence of the laws of thermodynamics. Entropy is for sissies anyway. ![]() |
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#1841
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| East Coast Quote:
On the west coast we sail the tall ships. We see little value in team building on other craft. Those who put young potentials on TP52s and craft like them are doing no favors twards them. Them that failed to get on Morning Light be the lucky ones. Argh mate! Seriously though, I suspect Roy Disney is going to drop the TP52 before the end of filming. We already have the VO70 kid boat. What a story. Apparently Hans was knocked unconcious; there was no chance of saving him. The lessons learned include value in roller furling. Frank L. Mighetto South Sound Sailing Society Eagle Island is a go. Get behind me oh Sudie er Satan we work on east coast time in waterworld |
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#1842
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| And yet, they keep ordering new TP52s. Strange how that works....... Nice, though ,since we get to build them ![]() |
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#1843
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| Question for Frank (seriously): I had the impression that youngster were trained in small sailboats (Optmists, sunfish, lasers, 470, FD, Snipes and so on) and Grand-Prix sailors sailed in large, complex, modern and expensive boats, (like Tp-52 for instance). However, you make it look like it is exactly the opposite. OTH can you please explain, what exactly is the relationship between a fixed keel high end boat, with a conspiracy to fill your sailing area with used boats? It doesn't make any sens to me why somebody will expend close to 2MM in the Mediterranean while thinking "JE JE JE, I can't wait to drop it in Pudget Sound"... Which is pretty much what you seem to imply... Last, I've read your site on the Mac-26. You state the Mac has movable ballast. And you also claim the daggerboard in the Mac is -pardon me I cannot recall the exact words - tirmmable. On the ballast, being able to fill it up or empty it, does not fall into movable ballast. VO-70 have movable ballast, one you can swing from port to starboard to increase leverage. Secondly, on the daggerboard, it seems is just a matter of poor fitting between the fin and the trunk. Can you please explain all this? Please note the tone of my post, I'm not making fun, nor flaming, just need to make some sense out of all this posts, and maybe learn a thing or two... |
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#1844
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| Quote:
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#1845
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| I had the impression that youngster were trained in small sailboats (Optmists, sunfish, lasers, 470, FD, Snipes and so on) and Grand-Prix sailors sailed in large, complex, modern and expensive boats, (like Tp-52 for instance). The making of a proper sailor has always involved more than plopping a young potential into a dinghy. Seamanship and sportsmanship are just as important. One of the sad things about racing PHRF-NW is that when a protest flag goes up you will have three or four boats do turns. What is going on is that the experienced know they have only a 50 percent chance of winning a protest even when they have played completely by the rules. This is because crews on other boats are trained to be witnesses and their testimony can be influenced. Hence even when right a protest may not be winnable. You are just as well off taking the unfair penulty on the course. If a flag goes up near you - you have little idea if it is directed to your boat or another. Hence multiple boats do turns. It really is pathetic. The reason we have famous race boats named code-of-silence is to call attention to a system of patronage where the young potentials who learn how to keep their mouths shut and outright lie (the scum) rise to the top. A proper training program cuts through that by using simulators. Because we in the Northwest do not have a program with a single simulator, I tend to view groups like the sailing foundation as wrong doers for the sport. With a simulator you can identify the cream and have that rise to the top rather than the cheaters. OTH can you please explain, what exactly is the relationship between a fixed keel high end boat, with a conspiracy to fill your sailing area with used boats? It doesn't make any sens to me why somebody will expend close to 2MM in the Mediterranean while thinking "JE JE JE, I can't wait to drop it in Pudget Sound"... Which is pretty much what you seem to imply... Are TP52s fixed keel high end boats? I think of them as the last in a long failed experiment where the promoters didn't understand how to use computers and test tanks. I am uncertain of your question? But the dumping of obsolete racing designs onto the west coast of the USA - especially Puget Sound - is a well accepted fact. The area is uncorrectly identified as best for deep fixed fin vessels. SF Bay and the area around the New York Yacht Club have lots of shallows so both racing and cruising are limited for fix fin deap draft boats. In fact the entire world is becoming less ands less favorable to these designs because there is no commercial reason for dredging. With the exception of Boston, all of the USA is better suited to retractable foils. The TP52s were designed for east coast conditions and their name use to mean Trans Pacific which implies west cost. Since the box rule didn't require meeting SNAME standards they were frauds from the start IMO. Not only have they proven to be owner-undesirable for pacific crossing but with the excepion of the last few generations they are also designer-undesirable for any kind of ocean duty. Last, I've read your site on the Mac-26. You state the Mac has movable ballast. And you also claim the daggerboard in the Mac is -pardon me I cannot recall the exact words - tirmmable. On the ballast, being able to fill it up or empty it, does not fall into movable ballast. VO-70 have movable ballast, one you can swing from port to starboard to increase leverage. Secondly, on the daggerboard, it seems is just a matter of poor fitting between the fin and the trunk. The movement that is important is on and off. PHRF-NW racing rules are concerned only with that kind of movement. The VO-70s allowed the movement of solid ballast from side to side. We are not allowed that in PHRF racing but it is allowed in the mini transat racing. I have been told by both the mini-transat and VO-70 experienced that the movement of internal solid ballast is the greater provider of stability. This of course requires labor and a different sailing style. Because a tack requires a lot of labor to move gear from side to side you want to make fewer of them. The Mac26x has a gybing (or jybing) center foil. I no longer think of it as a centerboard. It is best described as a canard. On fast downwind runs a canard will pop to the survace and with my new center foil I observe exactly that behavior. I have often speculated that trim taps could be added to that foil for upwind work but have found that partial lifting of the swing keel gives the same effect involving steering. I operate this craft as a bilge keel design now. Please note the tone of my post, I'm not making fun, nor flaming, just need to make some sense out of all this posts, and maybe learn a thing or two... When you run for office you have to expect some "funning" and dirty tricks. Just remember me when you vote for directorships at South Sound Sailing Society and US Sailing. My sailing carrier has advanced about ten times as fast as those buying into the code of silence. Yours can as well. Frank L. Mighetto |
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