When is rule 13 over ?
With the red course of position 4 you can sail with low speed.
Sailing the green course of position 5 you can sail faster than red course.
From rule 13: "......until she is on a close-hauled course"
Adjective, adverb, Nautical.
1. as close to the wind as a vessel will sail, with sails as flat as possible; full and by.
Which is the close-hauled course in this case ??
Red course of position 4 or Green of 5 ??
To answer the question posed in the heading, once it has reached position 4 the boat has gone from head to wind and has got to a close hauled course and so regains the rights that RRS 13 limited. She has regained the normal rights of a starboard tack boat at position 4. in normal parlance she has completed her tack. In position 5 she still has those rights having acquired them at postion 4, even if she only held the close hauled course for an instant. Her sails don't have to have been sheeted in, she doesn't have to actually sail on the close hauled course, she just have to have tacked all the way from head to wind to an instant of having her keel aligned with the close hauled course she could sail if so inclined. The fact that she passes through that close hauled course to a lower course to build speed, or for some other tactical or strategic advantage or through an error in technique or misjudgement does not matter, She no longer has to keep clear under RRS13 after having reached,even only momentarily, position 4.
While there is no obligation to do so, if this competitor wants to establish full compliance with RRS13, only bringing the bow up to red and trimming on would meet all of the Close Hauled requirements.
The competitor is then free to put the bow down, ease sails and go fast.
What everybody else said, but I'd add that "close-hauled" is based upon the individual boat's characteristics .. an Opti's CH course is diff than an Penguin, which is diff than a Farr 30 which is diff than a log-canoe or a catameran.
So, I think to really answer the question, we'd have to ask of you ....
"At which position is the boat's course the same as the course she would be making (in the current conditions) when on her optimum beat to windward once up to speed"?
.. that is close-hauled and which can vary widely based upon the boat.
Ang
PS .. or simply asked .. "could the boat actually hold and sail the red track?" if yes .. then that's likely close-hauled.
If the wind is directly from the top of the page, then the red course attained at position 4 in my boat is close hauled in every possible definition. I could sail far and fast in my boat without changing. When we tack I usually first steer to a course wide by ten degrees and harden up as the sails are trimmed in. But I never sail wider than 45 true and in winds above 10 kts sail to 40 true wind.
However I was going by drawing which shows a 45 true course with filled sails at position 4.
for example, a Tornado Catamaran can sail upwind at 30 degrees to true wind direction, but it's slow, we normally sail at 50 to 55 degrees, which gives the best VMG.
My guide for Tornados is when the self tacking jib fills, as the main is generally still released and is only hauled in once the boat is moving forward.
If the mainsail will fill when sheeted to the centerline then the boat has reached closehauled
If were not sure of that then the boat is still tacking.
I note that we are discussing a level of precision that is unlikely to be reached in a hearing that relies on oral testimony.