PUTTING THE “C” IN THE WESTON CAT OPEN 2010
PUTTING THE “C” IN THE WESTON CAT
OPEN 2010
Last weekend, we finally got to line our C-class INVICTUS up
against perhaps the fastest beach cats in the world at the Weston Catamaran
Open.
For us it was a chance to do some good racing, show the boat
to an enthusiastic audience and get a measure of her performance against the
state of the art of the soft sailed competition. We had a mixed bag of results
for one reason or another but overall we came away pretty happy with what had
been achieved. Weston did a great job and the event was a pleasure to attend.
We had a few little jobs to attend to before the racing
began such as fitting one of our old 2004 dagger boards to make up for the one
we lost in Newport RI during the last LAC. We rigged up the boat on Friday with
a very bleak forecast suggesting winds of over 30 knots during the day. It
didn’t look too bad out on Southampton water but there was a sense that there
was wind out ‘there’ somewhere. We held back a bit not really wanting to test
our luck... but still got as close to sailing as we could before making the
final decision. We watched a small but quality fleet go out to race which
included Will Sunnucks on his Texel winning Marstrom M20 which has been souped up with a wider than
normal beam and a bigger rig. Also out there were some F-18’s, Tornado Sports
and even Phil Cotton’s Seacart 30 which had been invited to play. We watched
them do the first race and decided that despite the forecast we hadn’t seen
anything that we shouldn’t be able to handle... so we should have some
confidence in a boat that had recently proven herself to be very reliable. We
pulled on the drysuits and went out to play. The start was just in front of the
club-house and we joined the fleet on their second lap around a short
windward-leeward course. Instantly Invictus shot to windward at a pretty high
angle and began putting distance on all the boats. We took a little while to
get comfortable as there were some fruity gusts coming through. We eased into
our top-mark rounding’s pulling out all the camber to turn off the power. We
made gains by not having to hoist or drop kites at the marks and had plenty of
grunt to do decent angles down-wind... so much so that we often underestimated
our down-wind angles and came in to the leeward gates very hot. In these
instances we would just pull the camber off again and try and make it a bit
more manageable. Some of the gusts sure were punchy and we had one big 'stuff'
where we thanked our stars for those two big, funky, retro bows. Invictus shook
it all off and were around the leeward mark and into the next beat. The angles
she does up wind really is rude compared to a soft sail... and it just seems to
get better with the breeze. She just keeps climbing out. Gordon and I got more
confident as the cobwebs rubbed off with every mark rounding. We began to undo
the lap we were down on the fleet. Unfortunately Will had an issue and was back
on the shore so we didn’t get to line up against the M20. We had one more good
hard stuff down-wind and decided enough was enough. We were happy with the boat
and the performance she gave, but the wind did feel like it was building beyond
‘C’ class territory so we took her home. In the end it was a good decision to
go sailing... and a good decision to put her away. We had a whole weekend ahead
of us and we didn’t want to blow it. Apparently we had posted the fastest lap
times of all the boats for the day. That was interesting as we really were just
going for a good shake-down sail. We took the rear flaps off the wing and just
laid the wing forward in the dinghy park for the night.
T vs C vs Sea... big, bigger, biggest...
If you look hard up in the left hand corner...
Seacart versus C class
The dinghy park at Weston Yacht Club was a hive of activity
in the morning as everyone else had turned up for the weekend. Besides Will’s
M20, we now had Peter Vink on the much hyped (and deservedly so) new NACRA
F20c, and the mighty TEK KAT 23 to deal with along with a host of Tornado
Sports and current F-18’s. Overall, the event had managed to get a pretty high
quality fleet of boats and it was great to see a big winged ‘C’ sitting amongst
all the ‘T’ s, ‘N’s, ‘V’s and ‘H’s. The mornings wind really crapped out come
race time. I don’t think there was much trapezing up the first beat and we came
around the top mark hard on the heels of the TEK KAT with the F-20 another five
boat lengths out front. Down-wind we just got crucified by the kite boats. We
had some real issues with the amount of force it took to hold the full camber
in the wing. We didn’t have the system onboard which we had used to good effect
in Newport and we paid the price. The wind was down around 4-5 knots and
dropping. Our angles were terrible whilst the kite boats could still make a
decent VMG. I know we can do much better than this so it was quite frustrating
not to be able to find our ‘Mojo’. In the end the wind crapped out
completely... but our race was effectively over half way along that down-wind
leg. It was both frustrating but equally illuminating of an area we need to
focus a lot more on. That afternoon the breeze came in a little so I gave the
helm over to Will Sunnucks and let him take INVICTUS for a blast. I showed him
how it all works upwind and downwind and generally let him absorb the pleasure
of gliding along in a big, smooth winged wonder. There was just enough wind for
the boat to begin to power up and, well, I’ll simply say that I’m pretty sure
that Will’s smile said it all.
Weston yacht club put on a great and well attended social
night complete with a fantastic fire-works display. I had the opportunity to
give a talk about our program and the C-class in general along with some speed
sailing stuff. Fortunately I was preaching to the converted because if there are
two things I can talk about... it’s the aforementioned. Helena always laughs
when people ask if I would like to do a talk! It was another nice night,
perfect for fireworks. It was so calm in fact that we just lowered the whole
wing forward behind the yacht club fully rigged ready for hoisting the next
morning.
What's not to like about this scene?
Thankfully there was a bit more breeze the following day. It
was a cool and patchy, Northerly which varied between 5-15 knots. I got down
there early and simply pulled the wing up, clipped on the trapezes and threaded
the mainsheet. She was ready to go and I had promised to take another keen cat
sailor in Jon Worthington out for a blast. It’s a pleasure to share the boat
with such appreciative and enthusiastic sailors. I’m pretty used to the scale
of the boat... but I’m sure it blows away someone who is still coming to grips
with an F-18. These guys are all pretty sharp sailors so it’s no worries to
hand over the helm straight away. In this case, Jon got a great sail in. He
also got a sense of the rapid transition you have on these boats from graceful
hull flying to “oh-shit” teetering on the edge of cliff of shame if you get too
cocky. Respect the wing Jon... respect the wing! Great stuff. A C-class is a
pretty exotic boat and getting to take one for a blast is something to be
savoured. It still gives me a huge buzz.
When the racing started, I think we had some issues on the
first start where we got stuck in irons spinning before the gun (sound
familiar)? We were left behind effectively starting over a minute late. Despite
this we still came around the top mark up at the sharp end of the 20 foot plus
fleet. Once again we struggled down-wind. I was trying to sail a bit hotter
down-wind with more weight to windward. My theory being that it was quite
patchy and we might be able to stay hooked up with apparent wind for longer.
When we were hooked up, we weren’t that far off the pace. The trouble was we
were mostly not in the groove... or all over the place chasing it. The boat
didn’t feel as slick down-wind as she was in Newport. We got hit by a gust
whilst heading for the leeward gate and did stuff but the big bows saved us
again. Whilst rounding up around the leeward mark, I heard a noise I knew meant
trouble. Our new/old 2004 dagger board had snapped. We still had enough down to
be effective upwind so we pushed on. We had lost about %50 of our area. It
wasn’t so bad as long as we ‘footed’ off and kept boat speed. In the fresher
breeze, Ol’ INVICTUS began to flex her ‘C’ class guns and do that cool upwind
thing where she just goes substantially higher and faster than anything else.
We would get left behind downwind... and find ourselves coming back into the
top mark with the front runners.
We had great starts on the third and fourth races and gave
everyone a good look at how a wing-sailed catamaran can go to weather... even
with only half a dagger-board. Towards the end of the third race I began to
move further to leeward down-wind and trade speed for depth. It worked a lot
better and when in the groove we could almost... but not quite hang on to the
good guys. Whenever we lost it we would get rolled by anything with a kite
including the Spitfires from time to time. I bet they liked that. We can really
screw some boats up as we do big dial ups in search of apparent and force
everyone above us up... way up. Sorry guys/girls... that’s what we need to do.
The more we sailed the sharper we got. Equally we became aware of the
performance killing issues that we were carrying. The broken board contributed
to a couple of blown tacks which cost us around 30-40 seconds each time (feels
like an hour when it happens), the slot was a total mess as the controlling
fingers had opened up and in the end we even got one of the fingers stuck in
our second element. This final piece was the equivalent of getting a jib batten
stuck on the mast and not blowing through (for those of you who have sailed on
Hobie 16’s a bit). We had to carry that for all of the fourth race. I tried to
take one more joy-rider in Ferdinand Van West out but the wind had died and I
realised the damage that the jammed finger could do when cambering the wing on
one side. It could only be remedied by dropping the wing. We took INVICTUS back
to shore and began packing her away in her trailer for the tow back to Bristol.
I owe you a proper ride Ferdinand.
CONCLUSION
What a fantastic weekend. It was so much more fun to be out
there sailing with friends old and new than playing around by ourselves down in
Weymouth... and 10 times more valuable. Nothing improves the breed like racing.
You can’t hide from your weak points and god knows we have some. We had some
glaring issues but then many of them can be resolved. I think it was easy to
see where we could gain big chunks around the course with more practice and
tuning. It was fantastic to line up against the cream of the modern beach cats.
We got to see firsthand just how quick the NACRA F-20, ‘Sunnucks special’ M20
and TEK KAT could be when they hit their stride. Equally they got glimpses of
what a ‘C’ could do in its stride. Knowing our own issues, what I had recently
seen of the best ‘C’ classes in the Little Americas Cup and what I saw on the
week-end, my gut feeling is that a good crew on the latest tweaked ‘C’ i.e.
Fred and Magnus on Canaan... would come out on top.
Some people took a cheeky shot at our downwind performance
but then you have to respect the ‘C’ class rule. Sure, we could put a kite on
our boat and have the same advantage down-wind as we do upwind but that (well,
let’s be honest... that would make for one very cool and wickedly fast boat...
as we will soon see in its 45 foot form)... where was I? Oh yeah, that... would
not be a ‘C’ class. The fact is that we could put a kite on a C and go fast
down-wind... but there is nothing so simple you could put on any of the other
boats to go so fast upwind... except a wing of course. The challenge of a C is
to design and build 300 square feet of sail area which flies upwind and gives
power beyond its area limitation down-wind. It forces you to sail extremely
efficiently and quite often in a unique ‘C’ specific manner. They are great
boats and the more we can go and play in fleets like this, the better we will
become. Funny enough, both the F-20 and the TEK KAT had to retire at the end of
the day due to broken kite poles! Hmmmm;)
THE FUTURE
Well, one way or another, the UK and hopefully the
continental catamaran fleets will see more and more of the C-class. It’s up to
us to develop ourselves up to the point where we can do the business up the
sharp end and release the full potential of the C. We simply have to go racing.
The weekend showed us that the new boats are damned quick (with a lot less cost
and hassle) and if we make any slips then they will just eat us up and spit us
out, but if we string it together on a new hot boat...like I said, I reckon the
‘C’ could still be king. I could be wrong but either way, it will be great fun
finding out. It’s up to us to prove it and we sure have some work to do. It
would be great to see Fred and Steve Clark come over and do some of the other
big events before the next Little Americas Cup in Weymouth in 2013. We should
aim to tie it in. The C-class can only do itself favours by sailing in mixed
events.
THANKS
Gordon and I, on behalf of the INVICTUS Team would like to
thank everyone at Weston Yacht Club, Stuart, Carl and Grant for
pushing/inviting us to come down and to the ladies and club in general for
making us feel so welcome. The pleasure was ours and we will be back. Thanks
also to everyone who helped us rig up and generally put up with our space
hungry beast in the boat park and on the water. The club put on a great
regatta. It was fantastic to see such an enthusiastic and high quality cat fleet...
in November. At the end of the day it
doesn’t really matter what you are on... it’s just fun getting out there and going
for it... I’ve missed this scene.
Cheers, Paul.
All pictures by H. Darvelid.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home