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    Archived Newsletters

    SCUTTLEBUTT 2068 - April 7, 2006

    Scuttlebutt is a digest of major yacht racing news, commentary, opinions, features and dock talk . . . with a North American focus.

    EIGHT BELLS
    William "Bill" Lapworth -- perhaps the foremost West Coast Naval
    Architect in the post World War II period -- has passed away. Born
    December 12, 1919 in Detroit, Michigan, he attended and graduated from
    the University of Michigan with a degree in marine engineering and naval
    architecture. At the end of World War II, after serving as a United
    States naval officer, he decided to make his home on the West Coast and
    began a design business. Work flowed to him readily and he was
    responsible for the design of some major changes to well known West
    Coast yachts that required new rigs to keep them competitive-the 82'
    sloop Patolita, later Sirius II, the conversion of the 98' schooner
    Morningstar to a modern Ketch rig; and the 77-foot Herreshoff Schooner
    Queen Mab with a new staysail schooner rig.

    Soon he was designing a series of light displacement racing sailboats
    that began to win or place highly on the East and West Coasts, beginning
    with Flying Scotsman and Nalu II, 46' -- a four time Class C Transpac
    race winner and first overall in 1959. Next came the 50' sloop Ichiban,
    second overall in the 1961 Transpac. By 1958, more than 70 of the wooden
    L-36' sloops had been built; but, by then fiberglass was becoming the
    material of choice.

    With Bill recognizing fiberglass properties as an ideal and readily
    available material for sailboats embodying both strong and light
    construction properties he began designing fiberglass hulls. He had
    phenomenal success in the major races on the West Coast. He designed Cal
    boats in all sizes from 20-48 feet and of course the famous Cal 40. That
    design proved itself over and over, winning many races including the
    Bermuda Race in 1966 and the TransPac in 1965, 1966, 1967 and 1985. The
    Cal 40 was so successful that it was inducted into the American Sailboat
    Hall of Fame, and led Bill Schanen, the editor of Sailing magazine to
    hail Lapworth as one of the sport's greatest designers. In cruising
    designs his Cal 46 was also produced in great numbers and continues to
    be enjoyed by the cruising set.

    As a shipmate Bill was absolutely tops to sail with; a consummate
    helmsman and extremely valuably tactician; always sought as a crew on
    major races. He also sailed on boats not of his own design, providing
    these most useful characteristics to their owners. His designs gave him
    a primacy never before achieved by a naval architect as yet on the West
    Coast. His calm demeanor was a most recognized characteristic and his
    evenhanded nature fostered only the best in his fellow sailors.

    Bill is survived by his wife of 40 years Peggy Lapworth. His children
    Barbara Burman Rolph, Charles William Lapworth III, Robert Lapworth,
    Jr., Susan Cohl and Kim Sorenson. A private burial at sea will be held
    on Friday, April 7, 2006. A reception will follow at 3:00 P.M. at the
    Newport Harbor Yacht Club, Balboa, CA. In lieu of flowers, a donation to
    the Newport Harbor Sailing Foundation would be appreciated. -- Excerpts
    from the LA Times and Latitude 38

    BY DESIGN
    Harry Dunning is the principal designer for the Mascalzone Latino –
    Capitalia Team. He has been a professional yacht designer for over 20
    years, including long stints at Farr Yacht Design and the Reichel & Pugh
    design office. As a sailor he has competed in many of the world’s top
    events, including Fastnet and Sydney-Hobart races, among many others. He
    played a lead role in the design of the two Stars & Stripes boats from
    the last Cup, USA 66 and USA 77, both of which have been acquired by the
    Mascalzone team for training. The following are some of his quotes from
    an interesting interview with him posted on the official website of the
    32nd America’s Cup.

    “The biggest change is that the size of the ‘box’ for the boats has
    become extremely small for the 2007 series. This has narrowed the
    playing field considerably and decreased the range of basic design
    parameters which need to be explored. The weather is of course critical.
    Our weather analysis has all been coordinated by our team meteorologist.
    Our approach, as far as the design work is concerned, is to augment the
    data available to all teams with data and analysis of our own. This data
    is then statistically reduced and worked into the VPP analysis. Major
    design decisions are based on this analysis. I think that we will see
    considerable innovation and refinement with small and moderate details
    of the new boats. But I do not expect big differences in shape and
    configuration with respect to the boats we saw during the 2005 Louis
    Vuitton Acts.”

    When Dunning was asked, how relevant money is to the America's Cup, he
    responded, “It cannot be argued that it is very, very important. Money
    buys more research, equipment, and the best people. But Alinghi showed
    in the last Cup that it is possible to dominate the event without
    necessarily having the biggest budget. The bottom line is that money is
    critical, but past a certain threshold the most important ingredient is
    talent.” -- Full interview: http://tinyurl.com/j5lal

    RAW SPEED
    The Volvo Ocean Race fleet has broken into the south easterly trade
    winds and the true performance of the Volvo Open 70 is on display once
    more, performance that in the past had been the sole province of the
    racing multihull, not the world girdling monohull. Currently the Volvo
    Open 70s are all sailing two knots faster than the true wind in which
    they sail. Thursday night, there is a mere 335 nautical miles separating
    Bouwe Bekking’s boys on movistar from the long awaited Island, Fernando
    de Noronha and potentially first place at the scoring gate.

    They have managed to pull out a further four miles in the past six
    hours, now 29 nautical miles in front of second place. Their sailing
    configuration seems entirely suited to the conditions and, bearing in
    mind some of their performances in the rough stuff of the Southern
    Ocean, you have to wonder what would have been the leaderboard situation
    had they managed to avoid the damages that have beset them on previous
    legs.

    Pirates have slipped back into the clutches of ABN Amro One courtesy of
    a hole in the wind at about 1335GMT. It affected Brasil 1 also, but the
    greatest sufferer was Pirates who saw ABN Amro One come over the horizon
    and draw alongside. An understandably miffed Paul Cayard explained his
    frustrations to our radio reporter Guy Swindell’s in an interview which
    is on the website’s Latest Audio page. Suffice to say, Cayard says that
    it is inevitable that ABN Amro One will come by even if they make
    mistakes as they have such raw speed.

    Despite his pleasure in his own boat’s performance, Cayard says that it
    has been hard to get his head around the concept that there is one boat
    which is so much faster then the rest. He puts the speed difference down
    to One’s second generation status. They had the time to build their
    second boat with the knowledge from the first, optimising the strength
    and the weight and making the build as heavy as possible. This, coupled
    with greater overall beam, makes for a much more powerful boat with the
    possibility of a wider sheeting angle, something very useful at the
    moment with a lot of reaching on the menu. --
    http://www.volvooceanrace.org

    Volvo Ocean Race Positions at 2200 GMT Thursday
    1. movistar, Bouwe Bekking, 3927 miles to finish
    2. Team ABN Amro One, Mike Sanderson, +29 miles
    3. Pirates of the Caribbean, Paul Cayard, +32 miles
    4. Ericsson Racing Team, John Kostecki, +41 miles
    5. Brasil 1, Torben Grael, +45 miles
    6. Team ABN Amro Two, Sebastien Josse, +66 miles

    LIGHTEN UP BERMUDA RACERS
    Euro Marine Trading has recently announced that the innovative and
    award-winning Lopolight LED navigational lights are now available in
    Carbon, significantly reducing weight aloft. The carbon lights can be
    seen aboard Ericsson Racing in the Volvo Ocean Race, and the Aluminum
    Lopolights were chosen by all other VOR campaigns. Lopolight Nav lights
    are virtually indestructible, draw 90% less power than incandescent
    lights, and can withstand the toughest ocean conditions. Light your way
    to Bermuda with innovative marine lighting from Lopolight. To order, and
    for more information, visit us at http://euromarinetrading.com

    SPECIAL BREED
    “Life of being a navigator isn't always as easy as it looks. On this leg
    nobody is jealous of Capey (Andrew Cape), when he is spending long hours
    downstairs in the navstation, sweat pouring down and looking over his
    maps and all the route options. Sometimes I am not even sure what he is
    doing, but it seems that he is always programming to optimize all the
    aspects of his job. I love to peek out of my bunk when he is at work.
    Sometimes he goes without any sleep for 24 hours.

    “Like tonight for example, the hammer hit him. He was working on some
    programme, his headset on (music on full tilt) tapping continuously on
    the keyboard. But then all of sudden the sleep was on the winning hand.
    His head started rolling and rocking a couple of times, but he kept
    pushing the key tabs. Then all of a sudden his head rocked forward and
    crashed with a loud bang on the navstation. I nearly rolled out of my
    bunk with laughter, but also a bit concerned that he might have hurt
    himself. But none of that, he was sound asleep and lying in an
    impossible position, something only he is able to do.” -- Bouwe Bekking,
    movistar skipper

    NEWS BRIEFS
    * Three newly built TP52 boats have arrived Spain in the last week to
    begin preparing for the Breitling MedCup six-event Circuit. Platoon
    (GER) and Fram (NOR) have arrived in Palma de Mallorca, while the
    Spanish boat Mutua Madrileña, has made Valencia its temporary home. Six
    TP52’s will be competing in PalmaVela (21-23 April) – Mutua Madrileña,
    Platoon, Santa Ana (ESP), Bribón (ESP) and AIFOS (ESP). While Caixa
    Galicia (ESP), Tau Ceramica Andalucia (ESP), Ono (ESP) and Siemens (IRE)
    will be racing at the Regata Ciudad de Malaga on Spain’s Costa del Sol,
    over the same period. -- http://www.medcup.org

    * The Musto Seamanship Trophy for Leg 4 of the Volvo Ocean Race was
    presented to Chris Nicholson, Watch Captain on the Spanish entry
    movistar by skipper Bouwe Bekking. When water came flooding into the
    hull, threatening to sink the yacht west of Cape Horn, Nicholson bravely
    dived under the water to connect two emergency pumps direct to the
    vessel’s batteries. He suffered a series of electric shocks, as he made
    the connection, but his achievement in doing so enabled the crew to fire
    up the pumps and drain tonnes of seawater back into the ocean.

    * In an effort to have its Suddenly Alone Seminar reach a wider
    audience, the Cruising Club of America's (CCA) has transferred the
    seminar’s administration to North U. -- http://www.northu.com

    * In a story posted on SFGate.com website, Raymond Freymann, managing
    director of BMW's research and technology group, said BMW Oracle
    America’s Cup syndicate crew members have sunglasses equipped with
    displays that allow them to monitor different sailing conditions, such
    as wind speed. -- http://tinyurl.com/jss3u

    * Faye Bennet was added to the list of Medalist Donors as US Sailing’s
    Sailor of the Week. She was the first female sailing judge in the US,
    the first woman to compete in the U.S. Men’s Championship (Mallory Cup),
    the first woman to chair the U.S. Jr. Championship Committee, to sit on
    US SAILING’s Board of Directors and to be elected President of her
    regional sailing association (North Jersey YRA). Faye has committed her
    time, talent, and resources to this sport from the time she developed
    and taught the first Junior Program at the Spray Beach Yacht Club in
    1950. -- http://tinyurl.com/g9wwj

    * The Bitter End YC on Virgin Gorda, British Virgin Islands, has
    announced the ten skippers for their 20th Annual Pro Am Regatta Week
    (October 28 - November 5) where the guests of the resort make up the
    crews for the world class skipper. This year the ‘junior’ skippers are
    Russell Coutts, Paul Cayard, Ken Read, Dawn Riley and Robbie Haines,
    while the ‘seniors’ are Lowell North, Keith Musto, Bruce Kirby, Butch
    Ulmer and Rod Johnstone. The Scuttlebutt Sailing Club Championship
    Regatta will be held concurrently, and the Curmudgeon will be there.
    What a week! -- http://www.beyc.com

    * Exhibitors from five countries will showcase an extensive fleet of
    boats -- from small dinghies that can be car-topped to a 92-foot
    cruising yacht with more luxury per square inch than most homes -- at
    Strictly Sail Pacific, a five-day sailboat show that opens at Jack
    London Square on April 19. Strictly Sail will feature over 300
    exhibitors, free seminars with experts, and special events for all ages.
    Newcomers can Discover Sailing on half-hour sailing excursions with
    expert skippers. The try-sailing opportunities are free with the price
    of admission. -- http:// www.strictlysail.com

    * The painting of the hull of CHN-79 is almost finished with only a few
    final touches left. The red dragon has reached his final length, while
    the stern is now completely red. The deck of the boat is also covered
    with a strong red color and without any doubt the result will be very
    impressive. The Valencia Sailing blog has posted some impressive photos
    of the emerging form. -- http://valenciasailing.blogspot.com/

    MAN VS. MACHINE - WHO WINS?
    When you buy a sail, you buy technology. But you also make an investment
    in people - that’s why you need real sailmakers, not boat-hopping
    salesmen. Every Doyle loft is staffed by sailmakers with more skill and
    sailmaking knowledge than other brands (Doyle loft managers have been at
    it, on average, for 35 years). Technology alone won’t make you win -- if
    your sailmaker won’t invest the time to get to know you, your boat, and
    local conditions, you lose. Ready for a real sailmaker? Call us at
    1-800-94-DOYLE; http://www.doylesails.com


    LETTERS TO THE CURMUDGEON
    (Letters selected for publication must include the writer's name and may
    be edited for clarity or space - 250 words max. You only get one letter
    per subject, so give it your best shot and don't whine if others
    disagree. And please save your bashing, and personal attacks for
    elsewhere. For those that prefer a Forum, you can post your thoughts at
    the Scuttlebutt website:
    http://sailingscuttlebutt.com/cgi-bin/forum/gforum.cgi)

    * From Hank Evans (re story in ‘Butt 2067): Coverless books, short
    handled toothbrushes and one pair of boxer shots worn 4 ways to save
    weight. Give me a break! I'm afraid our sport has reached the epitome of
    ridiculous.

    * From Peter Huston (re the resolution of the TSA Problem): I'm reminded
    of something I learned from John Bonds when he was Executive Director of
    US Sailing. A member of a committee had gone and done something on
    behalf of the organization that wasn't perhaps perfectly presented, but
    the results were outstanding. When a group of senior US Sailing
    officials were considering what to say to this gentleman, some actually
    suggested scolding him even though he had gotten results as yet not
    achieved, John simply said "There are only two words you can ever say to
    a volunteer - Thank You".

    * From Jim Stone: The TSA supervisor at Miami International in December
    took the CO2 Cartridge from my life jacket that was in my carry-on.
    Interestingly, the same life jacket with cartridge was in my checked
    baggage on the way down to assist the Jury for the Etchells Jaguar Cup
    Series, and was not touched or removed. Thanks for the update on this
    issue. Next time I’ll have the printed policy with me.

    * From Chris Doutre (re flying with CO2 cartridges): Sailors flying to
    Mexico to meet their boat must face this issue. You have stated the TSA
    and FAA rules, which basically avoid answering the question. Now, what
    would be truly useful information would be a list of airlines that
    actually allow CO2 cartridges onboard. I haven't found one yet. What's
    doubly frustrating is that the US Sailing website reports that American
    Airlines (for example) allows them in checked baggage (as of 4/18/03),
    but if you phone them today, they say no. In the end, I expect that the
    list will be so short as to be useless.

    Here is some more info from http://www.southwest.com:
    - Life rafts may be transported and will count as one of the three,
    free checked bags allowed. If the life raft meets the carryon sizing
    criteria it may be carried onboard, but will count as a carryon bag.
    Cartridges associated with a self-inflating life raft must be removed
    and are not allowed on Southwest.
    - Self-inflating life vests with two small gas cylinders (cartridges)
    and two small spare cylinders are allowed in checked baggage. The
    Transportation Security Administration (TSA) prohibits them from being
    carried onboard in carryon baggage. We recommend Customers pack
    self-inflating life vests in checked luggage to avoid complications at
    the security checkpoint.

    * From Doug Bailey (Regarding Chris Mc Kesson’s comments on Hybrid Power
    in Butt 2067): HaveBlue has a concept, a website and not much else.
    Catalina Yachts has taken back the boat, the power system was never
    completed and the investors would like to find and have a meeting with
    the founder. Someone looking for information from a builder with up and
    running systems should contact John at consercatamaran.com. At least 2
    of his 47’ cats are electric powered.

    In the early 1970s Stan Gibbs Sr. put a small gas engine up in the
    forepeak of his Cal 28’, hooked up an industrial electric motor and went
    out on “Wet Wednesdays” and cruising. Also in the early 70’s in
    Sacramento Delta Area I was on a Cal cruising 48’ that had been modified
    to twin screw electric with 3 gensets of various sizes under the salon.

    * From Robie Pierce: Dan Strohmier is one of the few remaining US
    legends of sailing. Along with Olin Stephens, also 95, they are gifts to
    our yachting heritage.

    CURMUDGEON’S OBSERVATION
    Why do bars advertise “live bands?” Are there any dead bands performing?

    Special thanks to Euro Marine Trading and Doyle Sailmakers.



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