Windmill Northerns at Lake Massabesic, Auburn, NHSeptember 16 - 17
Story

Rick & Jaspar Fontana (4621) made their annual trek from Portland ME to Manchester NH where their consistency dominated an 8 boat fleet which sailed 6 races in very light to essentially drifting conditions. A record of (2)-1-2-2-1-2 left them well ahead as they managed to sail fast and stay out of trouble throughout the 2 day event.

With 4-5 mph winds to start the regatta, the committee set a WL course but with the L mark below the start/finish area allowing a beat back to the finish. The first race found the Fontanas locked in a tight battle with Larry Christina/Allie Sponar (Dave: 5319) around the course. Allen Chauvenet & Sarah Steward (Beauty & The Beast: 5586) were very close astern starting the final beat for the finish and went left for free air, bearing off for speed. The battle between 4621 and 5319 was hard fought and not decided until the final tack--but Allen & Sarah gained enough with free air to come across of port tack and take the gun! A spectacular feature of this race was Ed Watt & Matt Sponar (Inspiration: ) who became totally becalmed after rounding the weather mark. This led to them being so far behind that the RC started the sequence for the second race before they finished. However, "Inspiration" got the puff of the day and crossed the line moving well moments after the starting gun--thus finishing race 1 and starting race 2 essentially simultaneously!

The second race was sailed in similar conditions. This time the Fontanas led at all marks with Allen & Sarah close behind and ahead of Larry & Allie. Ed & Matt used their start to move up in the fleet and claim a 7th in this race with even better things to come.

The 3rd and 4th races were sailed in winds just slightly more than drifting conditions. Larry & Allie sailed sharply to win both of them while Rick & Jasper took the runner up positions to hold a slight edge for the regatta lead. Allen & Sarah struggled a bit in the dying winds so Jack Cartland & Jeff Janotta (Cupcake: 2117) took an excellent 3rd in the 3rd race, where Ed & Matt pushed into 5th close behind B&B in this race. Steve & Michelle Allen (3653) found speed and shifts to place 3rd in the final race of the day.

After an excellent evening, Sunday started with a glass-like lake with, if anything, even less wind than Saturday. Finally a very light breeze appeared and the RC headed out in hopes of getting in 1-2 more races. The major excitement of the day then occurred when a NH Marine Patrol boat appeared and ordered all boats (regardless of origin) lacking NH registration off the lake! The day was saved by the RC who (on a Sunday AM!) managed to contact someone higher up in the administration and the Marine Patrol boat announced that he would make an exception "for this one day.". Fortunately, the club now is set to contact the authorities prior to the regatta in 2018 and avoid a repeat of this!

Both races were sailed in very light winds over a WL course like those on Saturday. The Fontanas had just enough extra speed to edge out in front while the rest of the fleet wound up coming to the leeward mark with Lightnings and Scots! Somehow Sarah & Allen were able to maneuver to the inside of all boats and round the leeward mark with free "air" and pull away for a second followed by Larry & Allie with Steve & Michelle in 4th, essentially clinching the regatta for Rick & Jaspar. In the drifting conditions of the final race, Jack & Jeff started by the committee boat, somehow pinched off Sarah & Allen, forcing them to tack. They worked "Cupcake" up the beat beautifully (everyone sailing in SLOW motion) to lead the Fontanas around the mark. Steve and Michelle took a long port tack and seemed becalmed but found a private breeze to charge down to the mark and round right behind the Fontanas with Sarah & Allen 4th just ahead of Larry & Allie. Larry & Allie wound up in a mess of Lightnings & Scots and had to do turns, leaving them a relatively distant 5th. Jack & Jeff made it around the leeward mark with the lead and held on to win ahead of the Fontanas while Steve & Michelle were able to stay ahead of Allen & Sarah on the final "beat" (close reach) to the finish.

In spite of the lack of wind, everyone had an enjoyable weekend with the Fontanas winning and Larry & Allie (who would have won a tie break) holding 2nd just appoint ahead of Allen & Sarah. NEXT YEAR--no Marine Patrol and hopes for a return to a 10 boat fleet! Thanks to all the members of the RC and the NH Windmill Fleet who contributed to making this another successful Windmill Northerns!
Result
PosBoatNameTotalRace 1Race 2Race 3Race 4Race 5Race 6
14621  Spaghetti Farm     Rick & Jasper Fontana              102(2)1(3)2(5)2(7)1(8)2      (10)
25319  Dave               Larry Christina/Allie Sponar163(3)3(6)1(7)1(8)3(11)5       (16)
35586  Beauty & The Beast Allen Chauvenet/Sarah Steward         171(1)2(3)4(7)4(11)2(13)4       (17)
42117  Cupcake            Jack Cartland/Jeff Janotta     255(5)4(9)3(12)7(19)5(24)1      (25)
53653   ------            Steve & Michelle Allen   254(4)5(9)6(15)3(18)4(22)3      (25)
65102   Jouster           Glenn & Joan McKibben       366(6)6(12)7(19)5(24)6(30)6      (36)
75426    Inspiration      Ed Watt/Matt Sponar          408(8)7(15)5(20)6(26)7(33)7      (40)
85001    Tardis           Geoff & Sophie Ling         497(7)8(15)8(23)8(31)DNS(40)DNS     (49)
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Author: Allen Chauvenet (achauve...@gmail.com) contact the author
Subject: Mast Tuning
Info: (21712 views) Posted: Tuesday 10-7-08 08:17:35 PM
Colin--one simple way to reduce weather helm (in addition to depowering the main and keeping the boat flat) is to move or tilt the board aft, moving the underwater center of gravity aft. It is conversely helpful to move or tilt the board forward in light airs. Allen

:: Ethan, the tuning that you helped me with worked very
:: well. The pointing improved by leaps and bounds. I
:: wanted to sail a few times to make sure that what I was
:: seeing was consistent.

:: From what I've observed in my last few times out I find
:: that I have a lot of windward helm and tend to get
:: sucked up into the wind but pointing isn't a problem any
:: more. This leads me to believe that I don't have enough
:: weight on the rail. With my crew and myself we weigh
:: about 260 lbs. so in 14+ winds we are very over powered.

:: I constantly have to let out on the main even with the
:: traveler all the way out, the bridal cranked down all
:: the way and the vang cranked on as hard as I dare. We
:: have done very well not capsizing but we have been
:: riding the chines hard and the pressure on the rudder is
:: big. I can see it as I look back and see the wake coming
:: from it and hear the noise. I've tried moving back and
:: forward with my positioning to see if it helps but
:: doesn't seem to. Back does however seem slightly better.

:: I re-measured according to the tuning instructions on a
:: 15+ windy day with storms approaching and with the 36"
:: dimension exact. We were still way over powered to the
:: max on a beat. The amazing thing though was when we let
:: out for a reach, this boat reached speeds that I never
:: would have imagined. I once owned a sailboard and I
:: don't think that even on the windiest days I got quite
:: this fast. My only regret was that someone wasn't
:: watching us. I'm guessing we hit between 15 and 20 KTS.
:: The winds that day reached 29.4 KTS and that happende
:: while we were racing. We were on living on the edge of
:: disaster. The charge that my daughter and I got from
:: sailing so fast will be had to match. Wow!!!

:: Unfortunately we were the only boat in the portsmouth
:: class at DIYC so I'll never know how we would have done
:: against the other boats in our class. I do know that
:: even though we had a shorter course then the other boats
:: we missed the white out rain conditions and had the boat
:: on the trailer before everyone else even finished.

:: Experiences like this is what I live for. I'm so glad I
:: got into my Windmill and I'm sure I will continue to
:: enjoy it until I've completely worn it out.

:: Check out this link, this is what I'm talking about.
::
:: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDToL593cmU

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  • Mast Tuning (21713 views) [x] (current)
    Allen Chauvenet ~ Tuesday 10-7-08 08:17:35 PM