Windward/Leeward course.
SI s state “other than at the start and finish of a lap of the course, the Start/Finish line is an Obstruction and may be passed on either side. Competitors shall pass thru the Finish line at the end of each lap.”
My question (with a windward start)… on the downwind leg, the S/F line is defined as an Obstruction which may be passed on either side. ….. Does this preclude a boat sailing thru the line downwind if it so chooses?
Defining the “downwind” leg is also a problem …. Consider a 90-180deg wind shift !
Consider a 90-180deg wind shift ! Sailing in the Gareloch no doubt. SIs could define the leg as between two particular rounding marks.
https://www.racingrulesofsailing.org/posts/1169-restricted-start-finish-line-mark-room
Here is one older thread:
https://www.racingrulesofsailing.org/posts/368-is-the-start-finish-line-an-obstruction-on-a-downwind-leg
….which included https://www.racingrulesofsailing.org/posts/141-closed-line-on-a-course
https://www.racingrulesofsailing.org/posts/145-closed-line-and-rules-18-and-19
…..“I can’t seem to put my finger on the post about a mid-channel traffic-separation line that boats were not supposed to cross. That thread had a lot of good ideas and observations in it. “
https://www.racingrulesofsailing.org/posts/761-rules-at-a-continuing-obstruction-redux
Angelo Guarino
Said Created: Sun 18:24
IIRC, those previous threads were about where the SI said the S/F Line was 'closed' or 'restricted ', and whether that made the line an obstruction, without the SI expressly saying 'The S/F Line is an obstruction'. The problem being that if the line is not an obstruction, an outside boat can 'shepherd' an inside boat across the line, thus breaking the SI, without herself being penalised.
Mike is posing the question the other way round: if the SI say the S/F Line is an obstruction, does that mean that boats may not sail through it?
Let's look at the definition
An object that can be safely passed on only one side and
an object, area or line so designated by the sailing instructions are also obstructions.
The definition has three limbs. The first two are objects that actually can physically obstruct a boat.
The third limb, objects, lines or areas designed by the SI, does not have this quality of physical obstruction.
As I construe it, designation of a line as an obstruction by the SI does not prevent or prohibit boats from sailing through the line.
If you want to do that, you need a SI that says 'Boats shall not sail through th S/F Line ... '
What's the advantage of making the ends marks rather than the whole line an obstruction?
As a judge, I don't think I'm any more or less familiar with 'nuances' of rule 18 or rule 19.
An umpire might have difficulty eyeballing exactly where the imaginary obstruction line is when two boats are sailing parallel and close to it, but maybe this logic that i would apply in the protest room would help.
The outside boat protests the inside boat for crossing the line.
If the boats were close together (1 foot, 1 metre) at the instant of the incident, that's when O alleges I crossed the line, then ill probably conclude that O didn't give I room.
If they're further apart, then unless O's evidence is that I sailed straight through the line and kept on going, then ill probably conclude that the evidence does not prove on balance that I crossed the line, and dismiss the protest.
The RRC has gone to the trouble of putting lines into the definition if obstruction with just this situation in mind. ISTM we should use it, rather than inventing something else.
Also, they objective of the exercise is to stop boats sailing through the line. If you just make the ends marks, boats can do all sorts of dipsy doodahs back and forth across the line and still leave the marks on the required side.
Yes, I think a line as long as a starting line is a continuing obstruction. All that means is, in a very few cases we have to apply rule 19.2(c).
Why are we concerned whether a boat is sailed in a seamanlike way? No rule requires a boat to be seamanlike.
Are you thinking about MR Call D1?
In that case the buoy was a physical object, but neither an obstruction nor a mark that I was required to pass on a specified side, so neither rule 18 nor 19 applied, and they were left with rule 16 and the definition of room.
In this case, we've designated the line as an obstruction, so rule 19 applies.
I think you're asking for a bit of a Rolls Royce standard of resourcing, and setting the standard a bit high for club racing.
Mike wants to close his line for good and sufficient reason to facilitate count back or average lap scoring, which I understand is quite common in the UK.
It's not like a lazy race committee that wants the finishing line closed because they couldn't be bothered keeping track of boats.
"In the event of a course being shortened Flag S will be displayed and the finish will be between a rounding mark and a staff displaying flag S. If flag S is displayed at Gate 2 or Mark 2 [the downwind gate/mark] then competitors are to proceed direct to the finish line. This changes RRS rule 32.2."
In this case the Finish line was to leeward of the downwind gate/mark. Solution ??