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I actually understand where you & others are coming from entirely. I just happen to work in a setting where we have lots of limits associated with technical considerations, but we have to deal with cases where people have used emotional arguments to make bad rules instead of getting down to real technical issues. As such, you can probably see that I have become somewhat stubborn when it comes to this kind of thing.
I'm not sure its helping referring to a detailed and concise argument as an "emotional" response. Clearly I have detailed some significant advantages these venues give certain types of vehicles and obviously the mechanical devices employed at those sites external to the vehicles improves there speed and stability. Alterations to the topography resulting in wind breaks for the riders is also a very questionable tactic favoring vehicles that might be able to fit in a ditch. Once again this also represents external speed enhancing devices which is clearly breaking the rules and simply not a very honest way to go about "winning" a speed record.
If I sail along the natural strip of land that encloses Cape Hatteras, with a wind that is blowing out to sea, it is just plain old normal sailing with no man made advantage. If I am in a bigger boat, I will need to be a little farther off shore. If I am in a smaller boat, I loose some of the advantage of size (bigger really is better in boats) but I can get a little closer where the water is a little smoother. If you pick any arbitrary limit on how close I get, I simply cry foul and say that you are making rules that favor the big guys with the deep pockets and the big boats.
which is why I'm not specifying any great distance offshore, Even just a few hundred feet would move the party to a significantly more level playing field for all the players involved rather than simply favor a one or two types of vehicles as the present situation does
Just saying that being up close makes it possible for some advantage to occur is not good enough. Big boats can also be up close if they can find a suitable location. Everyone has the challenge of finding the best location they can. Big boats just happen to have a huge advantage where relative chop (wave size divided by boat size) means that up real close does not matter as much.
Thats not what I'm saying. I'm saying that the ditches unfairly advantage certain types of craft that have demonstrated an inability to compete in "comparable conditions" yet these vessels dominate the record books based on the specific advantages they enjoy at certain venues. The mechanical and topographical assistance to there speed potential is also in serious question and I think these devises are in direct violation of several rules.
With the speeds we are talking about, trying to push the runs offshore would just end up with anything not huge operating in chop that is a real problem. This sport is risky enough as it is (videos of the crashes abound), without moving the smaller boats farther off shore.
so are you suggesting that these speeds are unattainable in the "comparable conditions" that other contenders who do not fit in a ditch have to deal with. Seems like you just proved my point. These vessels are unable to compete on a level playing field and that if they were out in open water they would unlikely be able to turn in the times we are presently seeing. On the other hand if the larger boats were able to enjoy the same mechanical advantages provided by the ditch venues they would likely be already running at least the 61 knots shown by Hydropter several years ago and once again these presently favored vehicles would likely not be dominating the record books.
Go after stuff where shaping the wind is a question and there is both a better basis and a better chance of coming up with a good solution. We could simply suggest that a little coaching of the on-site WSSRC rep be done so that regular competitions stay as clean as possible.
both shaping the wind and the water is highly questionable according to rules 7 and 9 and a ruling must be made which addresses this issue