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<BR>Tom;
<P>As an owner of both A-30 and A-37, our racing experience was about the
same with both boats, but I dispute the notion that these boats were designed
as "rule beaters" under the CCA by Carl. As Carl often
maintained, he designed his boats to no rule in particular and by CCA standards
of the day they were not hot raters.
<P>To be sure Carl was influenced by the age in which he designed his boats,
as we all are influenced by our times, but it definitely was no 'beater.'
At the end of the CCA rule boats were designed with outrageously heavy
decks and short draft and many a useless mizzen was added but note the
A-37 sloop has the same rig and only a 2 foot longer boom. In fact
many Sloop racers of the 37 felt the yawl boom fitted on a sloop was superior
to the longer sloop boom in performance and nearly all the A-37s at QCYC
were retrofitted with yawl main booms.
<P>In fact a lower aspect sail rig is still faster down wind than a high
aspect one. Sail technology also has a lot to do with higher aspect
ratios as dacron and now kevlar have the ability to better support the
asymmetrical loading over cloth or canvas. Added to this the belief that
keeping the centre of effort low was the only priority. None of this
was a rule issue, it was an aerodynamic one dictated by the technology
of the day (sail cloth).
<P>Additionally, CCA boats had long, not short booms and it was IOR that
developed the idiotic monster J to put really big jibs on and a correspondingly
shorter boom. Some booms are so short that reefing has virtually
no effect, <I>now that's a good idea</I>(sic).
<P>As with any rule, the rule itself becomes the recipe of its own demise
and the CCA like the IOR destroyed itself when "clever designers" pushed
the limit. Alberg was not one of them. The same is true of
the Universal and International Rules which gave us those dart like beauties.
<P>Unlike the CCA, the IOR self-destructed considerably faster and has
left the world with some pretty ugly and poor sailing boats suitable for
landfill.
<P>My point is that when racing both our 37 and previously our 30 we physically
beat boats with much faster PHRF ratings on REAL unrated time.
In one 300 mile race in our 30 we survived a gale and physically beat two
CS36s by 12 hours.
<P>The author can't have it both ways, either the Alberg is a rule beater
which wins on rating because it can't win on boat speed (the whole purpose
of a 'rule beater'), or it is a boat that is just about as fast as the
modern boats, which follows that there have been virtually no design improvements
in 30 years. Therefore the Alberg must be reasonably weatherly after
all and clearly are easier to sail.
<P>Plus they look great and in either soft or fast markets, Albergs sell
well.
<P>Cheers,
<P>John, PS. I agree with you George on all you wrote plus Cigarettes
are bad for you or so yer SG says.
<BR>
<P>Forhan, Thomas wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE TYPE=CITE>From: "Forhan, Thomas" <Thomas.Forhan@mail.house.gov>
<P> Well, the essay does give
credit where due for racing - indeed
<BR>maintains that the A37 and A30 were designed as racing boats. I think
the
<BR>general premise - that these old boats are viewed as wholesome traditional
<BR>designs by modern eyes when in reality they were built as racing rule
<BR>beaters is of some interest. And remember, he was looking at CCA designs
as
<BR>cruisers today, not racers.
<P> I was reading Eric
Hiscock the other night, talking about English
<BR>builders in the '30s charging by the Thames measurement. The measurement
was
<BR>most affected by beam, so that by reducing beam and holding all else
the
<BR>same you could get a similar boat at a better price. Net result- lots
of
<BR>narrow, deep boats, like the old Vertues, which were some of the first
small
<BR>boats to go offshore, as a class. So even the classic cruising boats
of the
<BR>'30s were compromises- well, all boats are.
<P> Anyone with an A37 looked
at a CD36? An A30 owner examined a Alberg
<BR>29?
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