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All Activity

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  1. Past hour
  2. Down to weight with Creedy fins and bulb no correctors fitted uses clip on pot lid as per Allioth etc
  3. Today
  4. Printed hull with glass Matt layer resin coating. Successfully raced for over 1 year at Fleetwood. RMG winch and rudder servo fitted no radio or stand . Will come with 3 rigs rigged for quick change in sail bag and ready to race . Requires a repaint to restore good looks but not essential to performance. Has certificate and setup guide £600 as I need to clear some space for new Allioth. Located East Lancs some delivery options available!
  5. CDH replied to CDH's topic in IOM
    Hi, yes it is still available. I'm available Monday through to Thursday next week. Cheers Chris
  6. I based my distances based on measurements taken from the control area, provided by a member of the jury and by a member of the race committee. The fact remains that in many heats umpires, observers and competitors could not read the sail numbers at the furthest mark. The result is an increase in incidents and a decrease in decisions.
  7. Yesterday
  8. Catherine Wilson joined the community
  9. Geoffrey Andrews joined the community
  10. Paul England joined the community
  11. Tony Griffiths joined the community
  12. IOM GBR 2540 with Mirage no. 1 Rig & no. 2 Rigs with 3 section storage bag all in very good condition. Ball raced gooseneck / kicking strap, Measurement Certificate. Digital Graupner servo DS 5391. RMG 280D winch. Deck switch. Radio, receiver and stand not included Whole boat in very good condition, 1st. class beginners boat..........£650 Contact me gordon.16@btinternet.com
  13. Is the boat stull on the market? Could we fix a meeting? I would drive from Normandy any time.
  14. Last week
  15. MarkH replied to Chris J's topic in IOM
    I've Pm'd you
  16. Chris J replied to Chris J's topic in IOM
    Hi yes still available
  17. MarkH replied to Chris J's topic in IOM
    Hi. Is this still available please?
  18. MarkH started following For Sale Classic IOM
  19. Josh King joined the community
  20. If you contact MYA with the number, they will transfer ownership. The Manta will be in the name of Howard Hooper. Sorry don’t recall if stand was left.
  21. Sorry, now purchased another boat R.
  22. I would have loved to sail RA. However, the family holiday has gotten in the way. ☹️ As a bit of a reconciliation I have everything lined up for the M nationals in September.
  23. Mark Robinson, entries are now open for you and everyone else racing Radio A class. Come along with your Sword!!
  24. Hi Nigel Could give. Name of previous owner so harry can apply for same number Did you leave stand? Peter
  25. CDH replied to CDH's topic in IOM
    Just back from holiday, sorry for delay. Located in Poole. Best to see the boat first.......
  26. The windward mark was never set further than 65m from the bank at the 2026 Worlds, as measured with a range finder. I was in the rib. It was mentioned before the racing started that this was the distance from the bank.
  27. Robmc started following Windward gates
  28. YACHTING MONTHLY CUP Model Yachting’s equivalent to the “Americas Cup” In 1922 there was an active model yachtsman in the London area, Bill Daniels, who challenged “any model yachtsman world wide” to meet him in a race or series of races. He convinced his friend the editor of the sailing magazine Yachting Monthly, to donate a trophy for this contest and the “Yachting Monthly Cup” annual event was born. The yachts used for this challenge, which we now know as A class, were built to a formula, devised by the editor and Bill, and was loosely based on the 6 metre rule at a scale of 2 inches to the foot, and produced boats with an overall length limit of 19 feet 6 inches! although most were around 6 feet in length. The class was called the “Yachting Monthly 6metre” There was a club founded for this class The YM6mOA (Yachting Monthly 6 metres Owners Association) was founded in 1924, probably by Mr W J Daniels at the Rick Pond in Home Park Surbiton, south London. This club still exists but is now known as Hampton Court MYC. The first event was held at Gosport MYC in 1923 and was won by Bill himself sailing a boat he had designed & built for its owner J Scott Freeman a solicitor and keelboat sailor from the Upper Thames YC. Daniels went on to win the next two years securing the YM cup outright for his owner Scott Freeman, who donated the cup to the UTYC for competition in 14 foot dinghys, where it remains to this day. That could have been the end of the story, except that Yachting monthly very kindly presented a further very grand silver cup in 1926, which cannot be won outright and this trophy is still raced for to this day. The Yachting Monthly Cup centre. The Cup was challenged for every year in a similar format to the America’s Cup with the previous winner defending and a new hopeful skipper challenging. Many Americans challenged unsuccessfully as is reported below from a story in an American Model Yachting publication. In some articles, John Black, who had represented USA on several occasions, was described as the “Sir Thomas Lipton” of the model yachting world, in that he failed to win the Cup, time after time. According to a later article in Marine Models of 1937, this point was echoed: “a well-known model ”. yachtsman has said that this Cup has caused as much grief to America as the America’s Cup has to England The point being made here is that it was a period (1923–1948) when America would dearly have loved to win; it was by far the biggest challenge in model yachting. A win for Bill Bithell and Fred Pigeon in 1948 on British waters would be momentous indeed. This is just what happened. The Event continued every year and reached it’s zenith in its 50th anniversary year, 1973 at Fleetwood when 56 competitors raced for the MYA National Championship and 13 boats from 8 nations challenged for the YM cup. As time passed interest in the A class fell but the National Championship survived and celebrated it’s centenary in 2023 at Gosport. Although the large number of entries are a thing of the past, there are a dedicated number of about 20+ boats racing each year with many 2 & 3 generational families taking part. The 2nd YM Cup which celebrates it’s own centenary this year is still raced for, although not in it’s original challenge format. In 1986 as overseas entries dried up, the event was changed to a knock out competition held on the Wednesday of the Championship week, and was won the first time by a boat from Portugal! The Fleetwood club, the centenary hosts look forward to welcoming as many boats as possible to the centenary celebration regatta. Derek Priestley President Fleetwood MYC & MYA
  29. Pierre joined the community
  30. Peterhaskell started following IOM
  31. Entries are now open for both A National Championships, and they're coming in steadily. have you entered yet?
  32. Earlier
  33. Paul Doidge joined the community
  34. I have some well used unidentified masts stashed away. If you give me the dimensions required I will have a look next time I have a rummage. Cheers Trevor
  35. Wanted A class Groovy carbon mast Maximum height for vane A. Andy Fernie 07779939583 yotter@yahoo.com
  36. Gary Dickens, That would be amazing. In 1976 there was a tie for 1st place between David Andrews (Whirlwind winches) and Derek Stevenson resulting in a sail off for the trophy with everyone watching. A much better, more exciting way to settle a tie than today's countback!!
  37. Kevin Leverington joined the community
  38. Might be able to get hold of a Bloodaxe.....
  39. Are our issues course distance related, venue related, skipper behaviour related or umpire standard related? A short answer: Yes, the issues are course distance related, venue related, skipper behaviour related AND umpire standard related! In an ideal world: An ideal venue would allow marks to be set at no more than 60m to the shore, yet allow for a decent windward leg, in all common wind directions. Setting a course with the wind coming off the shore, with trees or building obstructing the wind flow, will never be a good idea. I would argue that, in reality, the number of venues suitable for a World or Continental Championship is very small. Competitors would sail conservatively to avoid risky manouevres, and take a penalty when they may have broken a rule. There are still some sailors (even in a Worlds A heat who NEVER take a voluntary penalty but wait for an umpire decision. Major radio sailing nations would insist on national and some regional events being umpired, so that there was a far large reservoir of experienced umpires available for Worlds and Continentals. For my part: I recognise that my umpiring is completely different when I am following the part of the fleet near the shore. I can follow most incidents among the 6 or 7 boats I am following. When I am following the boats outside: I cannot read sail numbers of boats beyond the outside start mark, of the boats that tack away from the shore, nor the boats on the layline coming in to the windward mark. This also means that I, and most sailors, cannot judge laylines nor rapidly analyse relative speed, angle and distance between these boats. This means, for instance, that,if I cannot accurately judge the distance between two overlapped (and incognito) boats, how can I decide if the outside boat has not given enough mark-room to round the mark without touching it. During the Worlds , the RC made a real effort to keep the windward mark within about 75m of the shore. This meant that I, my colleagues and nearly all the observers we worked with could read the sail numbers when boats were approaching the offset mark! Windward gates provide a partial solution, in that there are (usually) fewer boats rounding each mark. Outside-in gates create a further zone with a high potential for incidents a few boat lengths down wind from the gate. We may have to change our umpiring strategy by placing an umpire to observe this area, which may mean that there will be only one umpire for both leeward marks!
  40. Identify the culprits, two strikes and you earn a demotion with a DSQ score.

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