Here is a question for those in the know
2 boats are racing (A & B) and they have left the start mark and are sailing to the turning mark
Boat A is ahead for most of the way but boat B catches her and overtakes her but takes a wider course around the mark whereas A turns closer to the mark and when they leave the mark A is ahead again
Both boats are on starboard tack and B starts to overtake A and is heading back to the starting mark which is the correct course but A believes that the course is around the bay mark before returning to the start mark and starts to head down towards the bay mark and closing up beside B and forcing B to alter course away from the start mark to prevent both of the boats coming together
B finally overtakes A and heads back towards the starting mark and A starts to head towards the bay mark
The crew on B ask A where he is heading and A says into the bay and the crew on B inform him that the correct course is back to the start mark
The question i have is when A and B were beside each other and A was pushing B down towards the bay mark instead of letting him sail the correct course back to the start mark which boat had the right of way
Regards Don
Hi Don,
when overlapped, the windward boat must keep clear of the leeward boat. (Rule10)
If the leeward boat gains the overlap by overtaking , and does so within two boats lengths to leeward, she shall not sail above her proper course whilst overlapped (rule 17)
From what you describe, A has no rights, B has right of way.
Here is a question for those in the know
2 boats are racing (A & B) and they have left the start mark and are sailing to the turning mark
Boat A is ahead for most of the way but boat B catches her and overtakes her but takes a wider course around the mark whereas A turns closer to the mark and when they leave the mark A is ahead again
Both boats are on starboard tack and B starts to overtake A and is heading back to the starting mark which is the correct course but A believes that the course is around the bay mark before returning to the start mark and starts to head down towards the bay mark and closing up beside B and forcing B to alter course away from the start mark to prevent both of the boats coming together
B finally overtakes A and heads back towards the starting mark and A starts to head towards the bay mark
The crew on B ask A where he is heading and A says into the bay and the crew on B inform him that the correct course is back to the start mark
The question i have is when A and B were beside each other and A was pushing B down towards the bay mark instead of letting him sail the correct course back to the start mark which boat had the right of way
Regards Don
Boat B has right of way being leeward boat (based on diagram and what you've said). Where the next mark is, is to a degree irrelevant unless you're within the 2 boat lengths from the mark. In which case boat b has to turn at the mark.
Thanks to all who have replied so far
Thanks for that and you have confirmed what i thought was correct
If the course was actually into the bay (as A believed it was) before returning to the start mark and B was preventing A from sailing towards the bay mark would A have any right of way
Regards Don
If the course was actually into the bay (as A believed it was) before returning to the start mark and B was preventing A from sailing towards the bay mark would A have any right of way
Regards Don
Don, A only has rights if B achieved overlap from leeward and astern within two boat lengths. B must sail her proper course till overlap is broken.
Other than that, B can luff them all the way to the horizon.
Hi Shaggy
When you say within 2 boat lengths i assume you mean if A was 20 foot long and B started to overtake A at a side by side distance of closer than 40 feet A would then have right of way
Is this correct
Regards Don
Hi Shaggy
When you say within 2 boat lengths i assume you mean if A was 20 foot long and B started to overtake A at a side by side distance of closer than 40 feet A would then have right of way
Is this correct
Regards Don
You got it!
Edit: B is only required to sail her proper course though. A can't be stupid and bear away into B obviously.
Hi Shaggy
Thanks for that
What about if B was happy to maintain 40 feet clearance between the boats while overtaking but because A thought the correct course was into the bay and was closing up on B reducing the distance to less than 40 feet does that mean that A then had right of way and it was up to B to sail further off course to prevent a collision and if a collision had happened B would have been at fault
Regards Don
in that drawing A has no rights . and from your description
but , the angle of the start to the wind looks atrocious ?
B is sailing her proper course to the next mark. If A has a blonde moment and decides that they sail off to some other mark and start pushing down onto B, Rule 10 applies. The windward boat must give way to the leeward boat.
B cannot sail abover her proper course.
A must give way to B.
Collisions are different Don, as you must do everything you can to avoid, even if you're in the right.
if A pushes down on B and is going to collide , B protests but must do everything possible to avoid
Hi Sands
I guess you are saying it was a poor choice of course by the person who set the course but this was only a small section of the actual course in the middle of the race with the bay mark being used and another mark further down and on the windward side of the turning mark i have shown and being Tassie and sailing on a river with hills and valleys the wind speed and direction is constantly changing so nothing stays the same for too long
Last night at 6 pm the wind at the starters box was 6 Knots NE, at 7 pm 4 Knots SW and at 7.10 pm 6 Knots SE
Regards Don
Collisions are different Don, as you must do everything you can to avoid, even if you're in the right.
if A pushes down on B and is going to collide , B protests but must do everything possible to avoid
Hi Shaggy
During the overtaking move A closed up on B to the point where A's boom was hanging over B and the skipper on A was telling B that if a collision happened B would be in the wrong
B continued to sail towards the start mark but A probably could have altered course 30 degrees to starboard to prevent a collision before they would have been headed
Regards Don
in that drawing A has no rights . and from your description
but , the angle of the start to the wind looks atrocious ?
Hi Sands
The course for the race was F and the incident happened on the S to T to S leg in the middle of the race
Regards Don
sorry Don i misunderstood . i was thinking they started you with the wind on your beam as you headed to the turning mark . that would be a crap angle for a start line
sorry Don i misunderstood . i was thinking they started you with the wind on your beam as you headed to the turning mark . that would be a crap angle for a start line
No worries
Regards Don
Collisions are different Don, as you must do everything you can to avoid, even if you're in the right.
if A pushes down on B and is going to collide , B protests but must do everything possible to avoid
Hi Shaggy
During the overtaking move A closed up on B to the point where A's boom was hanging over B and the skipper on A was telling B that if a collision happened B would be in the wrong
B continued to sail towards the start mark but A probably could have altered course 30 degrees to starboard to prevent a collision before they would have been headed
Regards Don
I was just talking to a mate who was on the 40' start line for Hobart. He mentioned how careful everyone was getting out of the heads, and how they got waved through on a couple of close crosses.
Thats seamanship. Rubbing paint is a dick move in my eyes. Protest them and stay out of the way.
A needs a beer and a quiet word by the sounds of it.
Collisions are different Don, as you must do everything you can to avoid, even if you're in the right.
if A pushes down on B and is going to collide , B protests but must do everything possible to avoid
Hi Shaggy
During the overtaking move A closed up on B to the point where A's boom was hanging over B and the skipper on A was telling B that if a collision happened B would be in the wrong
B continued to sail towards the start mark but A probably could have altered course 30 degrees to starboard to prevent a collision before they would have been headed
Regards Don
I was just talking to a mate who was on the 40' start line for Hobart. He mentioned how careful everyone was getting out of the heads, and how they got waved through on a couple of close crosses.
Thats seamanship. Rubbing paint is a dick move in my eyes. Protest them and stay out of the way.
A needs a beer and a quiet word by the sounds of it.
Hi Shaggy
I think the problem was that A wondered why B was sailing so far off what he thought was the course and B wondered why A was leaning on him instead of sailing to the mark
The good thing was we are all mates down here and there was no raised voices and everyone remained calm even when there was only a couple of feet between the boats and A apologised when he realised he had the course wrong but it was confusing at the time
Regards Don
Collisions are different Don, as you must do everything you can to avoid, even if you're in the right.
if A pushes down on B and is going to collide , B protests but must do everything possible to avoid
Hi Shaggy
During the overtaking move A closed up on B to the point where A's boom was hanging over B and the skipper on A was telling B that if a collision happened B would be in the wrong
B continued to sail towards the start mark but A probably could have altered course 30 degrees to starboard to prevent a collision before they would have been headed
Regards Don
I was just talking to a mate who was on the 40' start line for Hobart. He mentioned how careful everyone was getting out of the heads, and how they got waved through on a couple of close crosses.
Thats seamanship. Rubbing paint is a dick move in my eyes. Protest them and stay out of the way.
A needs a beer and a quiet word by the sounds of it.
Hi Shaggy
I think the problem was that A wondered why B was sailing so far off course and B wondered why A was leaning on him
The good thing was we are all mates down here and there was no raised voices and everyone remained calm even when there was only a couple of feet between the boats and A apologised when he realised he had the course wrong but it was confusing at the time
Regards Don
Good to know you're all mates.
I dunno how you'd open the conversation being mates and all, but it would probably be a good thing for A to be set straight on the fact that where the next mark of the course is, is irrelevant to right of way rules. Lest he try it on someone else.
Hopefully if it came to it, it would only be a protest that set him straight, and not a collision.
Hi Don,
Its great to hear you're all good mates, that's more important to me than a tin cup. But even if B had the wrong mark, unless you overlapped from close astern , A has no rights and you could luff A till he was head to wind and in irons if you wanted.
I still see this a fair bit where two boats get caught up in a luffing game, and they forget there are other boats in the race. The rest of the fleet will be grinning from ear to ear as the clear lane opens up and they sail right past
Edit: Sorry, I see Subsonic already has referred to the same point.
Just remember, proper course means fastest course to finish the race and not necessarily a direct course to the next mark etc. So even if the bay mark was the next mark, B might still have been sailing THEIR proper course to finish as fast as possible.
Prior to the START SIGNAL, there is no proper course, so you can luff a windward boat as you like.
Just remember, proper course means fastest course to finish the race and not necessarily a direct course to the next mark etc. So even if the bay mark was the next mark, B might still have been sailing THEIR proper course to finish as fast as possible.
Prior to the START SIGNAL, there is no proper course, so you can luff a windward boat as you like.
Thanks and good point FR. This can get really interesting on the downwind legs when you've got aso and symmetrical boats in the same fleet!
In Friday twilights at our club, not many call protest 'cause it appears that not many know the rules.
An incident last Friday in our racing at a mark that I happen to be a spectator to. A Dehler 41 & S80 both on starboard approaching a port rounding mark located in an area known as the Burmuda Triangle (where the wind can come from anywhere including downwards). S80 gets to his 3 boat lengths before the Dehler gets an inside overlap but the breeze dies. Dehler goes under S80, carrying momentum, but the breeze returns and the S80 needs to bear off to get going again. Much yelling ensures, the Dehler calling up and S80 calling for mark room. It would have been funny except they came very, very close to a 1 knot collision.
The Dehler is in the wrong and has no rights after becoming overlapped on the inside within the 3 boat length circle.
However, I can't see how the S80 can call for room at the mark if the Dehler is below her. The correct call should be 'give me room to sail a proper course'.
18.2 Giving Mark-Room
(a) When boats are overlapped the outside boat shall give the inside boat mark-room, unless rule 18.2(b) applies.
(b) If boats are overlapped when the first of them reaches the zone, the outside boat at that moment shall thereafter give the inside boat markroom. If a boat is clear ahead when she reaches the zone, the boat clear astern at that moment shall thereafter give her mark-room.
(c) When a boat is required to give mark-room by rule 18.2(b),
(1) she shall continue to do so even if later an overlap is broken or a new overlap begins;
(2) if she becomes overlapped inside the boat entitled to markroom, she shall also give that boat room to sail her proper course while they remain overlapped.
Proper Course
A course a boat would sail to finish as soon as possible in the absence of the other boats referred to in the rule using the term. A boat has no proper course before her starting signal.
The Dehler is in the wrong and has no rights after becoming overlapped on the inside within the 3 boat length circle.
However, I can't see how the S80 can call for room at the mark if the Dehler is below her. The correct call should be 'give me room to sail a proper course'.
18.2 Giving Mark-Room
(a) When boats are overlapped the outside boat shall give the inside boat mark-room, unless rule 18.2(b) applies.
(b) If boats are overlapped when the first of them reaches the zone, the outside boat at that moment shall thereafter give the inside boat markroom. If a boat is clear ahead when she reaches the zone, the boat clear astern at that moment shall thereafter give her mark-room.
(c) When a boat is required to give mark-room by rule 18.2(b),
(1) she shall continue to do so even if later an overlap is broken or a new overlap begins;
(2) if she becomes overlapped inside the boat entitled to markroom, she shall also give that boat room to sail her proper course while they remain overlapped.
Proper Course
A course a boat would sail to finish as soon as possible in the absence of the other boats referred to in the rule using the term. A boat has no proper course before her starting signal.
Yep, absolutely correct. The S80 was so rattled by the incident that they then sailed to the wrong next mark (followed the Dehler who was in a different division) and finished a long way last. They were leading the series in their division up until then.
I get very annoyed by the behavior of larger yachts' skippers in twilight races. We are 33' and when we have worked our butts off to get to the windward mark first, the 40 plus footers behind seem to think they can waltz through unchallenged to windward on the reaching legs despite having taller masts and larger sails that could easily sail through below.
This week it was a Hanse 40. When we luffed them up, one of the crew shouted indignantly 'Hold your course'!
One should give them a love tap and fly the red flag but its only a twilight race, not sheep stations. Luckily we are allowed a cold beer each downwind - otherwise my blood would boil. :-)
I had a Sydney 38 try that on me a few years ago. I took him from north of Scotland Is to Morning Bay (mark was at Long Nose). He got rather cross, as did his no-idea crew. But he never tried it on me again......
I had a Sydney 38 try that on me a few years ago. I took him from north of Scotland Is to Morning Bay (mark was at Long Nose). He got rather cross, as did his no-idea crew. But he never tried it on me again......
I presume you are talking about a pursuit start non spinacre twilight races. When the faster boat rolls you you are done but he can still pass the other slow boats ahead and is still in the race. Taking him up is considered poor form and you could be known as " one of those pricks" who will luff to the horizon irrespective of your own loss. Better to dive down low, let the faster boat past at minimum pain to yourself and concentrate on catching the slower boats ahead whom you no doubt pass to Windward.