The following is a hypothetical situation. I am curious as to what arguments each boat can and should make at the end of the day:
Conditions: Light wind. Constant wind speed and direction. No current. No waves.
Incident: Two boats (A and B) are approaching a windward mark to be rounded to port. Boat A is on starboard and is on her lay line to make the mark without altering course. B is on port and decides to tack underneath A to round the mark on the inside of A. Once B is on her close hauled course it is apparent she must sail above close hauled to round the mark and she does so. At some point while rounding the mark, B sails into the mark. A protests B for touching the mark and breaking rule 31. B does not counter with a protest of any sort on throughout the incident.
After racing: A and B both agree that it debatable whether B tacked inside A before they entered the zone or after. Both A and B agree that B touched the mark. B then brings forward the argument that A did not give B room to round the mark according to rule 18.
John
Craig, where does OP state in the scenario that "A was close hauled"?
John
Rule 18.2e is a special case of the principle of Last Point of Certainty. We can, and should use last point of certainty from first principles here.
Last point of certainty was that B and A were outside the zone. There is doubt that B passed head to wind inside the zone so it should be presumed that she was not inside the zone.
Both boats were on the same tack when the first of them reached the zone and rule 18.2b applies, and B is entitled to mark-room. This is the opposite conclusion to John Ball's, but I agree with Randy and I think it is the right one.
Whether P 'claims mark-room' has no meaning under the rules. Hails or claims or other shouting stuff do not affect enitlements of boats except under rule 20 and for protests.
As soon as B passes htw, she is on stbd and she becomes overlapped with A. (yes she is now tacking and subject to R 13 and later and briefly, R 15 as she becomes leeward with RoW). For B to claim mark room under R 18.2.b, she is claiming a new overlap. So the question is "was the overlap established before she entered the zone"? To me there is doubt about this late claim of an overlap, and that is what R18.2.e helps resolve.
John
My take is that there isn't enough info and the decision will rest on testimony of A, B and witnesses (if any).
B is claiming she wasn't given room. It's not stated in the OP, but it's implied that A says she provided room and kept clear.
Daniel, maybe you can provide answers to the following questions?
Absolutely, 100% correct. It's probably the #1 misconception held in racer's minds that "calling for room" creates any obligation. The only room you can call for in the RRS that creates an obligation is calling "room to tack" when at an obstruction (RRS 20).
OK, so putting 1-4 together, are you saying that A was ahead and overlapped to windward of B by ~1/4 BL (B's bow overlapped with A's stern quarter) and A windward of B by 1/4 BW at 1BL from the mark where B started to head up?
The issue I'm having with the scenario is (without a drawing) that the distances between the boats seem really, really tight.
I think we'll all agree that Boat B is owed mark-room and because we are assuming that the tack happened outside the zone and 18.3 doesn't apply, B can make A go above close-hauled or even tack if that's what A has to do to provide mark-room (as long as B doesn't go past head-to-wind herself).
If Boat B is 1 BW below the mark (which I'm interpreting as her windward rail is aligned with the windward edge of the mark), then in the absence of Boat A, B's proper course might be to sail directly to the mark and at the last second, round-up hard and try to "zoom the mark". That is certainly a seamanlike rounding. I do it often in my J/105 (please no comments on my ability to judge the line!), but my 105 has 8,600#'s of momentum to carry it. If this is the type of boat that can zoom upwind 1-2 BL's, then Boat A would need to provide Boat B room for that move.
So back to your geometry. You say B is 1 BW below the line .. and A is only 1/4 BW above B. B doesn't start to head-up until B is 1 BL away from the mark. But A has overtaken B so A is closer .. maybe only 1/2 BL away from or closer to the mark and only 1/4 BW to weather of the mark. That's not much room.
Complicating it is that A is ahead and so close to B. As A tries to turn to windward to avoid B, A's stern will close with B's bow as they both turn up. A being ahead and that close is limiting her ability to turn to windward to avoid B. B realizing that may have limited her turn speed to windward to clear the mark, turning more slowly to allow A opportunity to keep-clear and avoiding contact.
This is all sounding like A .. maintaining only a 1/4 BW windward separation up to 1 BL from the mark ... forward of B .. was too close to B. As soon as they both entered the zone, A to windward should have been working her way up .. making more than 1 BW's room to windward of the mark for B as she was required to provide mark room, and in this context that's at least 1+ BW.
All that said, I'm trying to imagine it in my mind. A drawing would REALLY help. - Ang
B passes htw outside the zone -> 18.3 does not apply
B to 1/4 BL to leeward and slightly behind A when A enters the zone -> A has to give mark room under 18.2 and keep clear under 11.
When she is 1 BL from the mark, B heads up to shoot the mark, never passing htw. A maintains 1/4 BL separation.
B touches the mark.
Did A :
Condition a) Was B forced to take action to avoid A?
Condition b) Could B change course in either direction without making immediate contact?
Did A give :
Could B leave the mark on the required side?
Had B room to sail to the mark?
Had B room to round the mark as necessary to sail the course?
Bear in mind mark-room includes :
Did B, in the existing conditions (constant light winds, no current, no waves) have the space she needed to comply with RRS ?
Did the parties give an answer to those questions?
However, OP gave us in the second set of facts the distance between the boats as a constant 1/4 BL, which in case of a J105 would be around 2.5m.
If both parties agreed to that distance, I would go with that.
B DSQed chance 90%
A DSQed chance 10% (based "facts found" in a protest) Facts found by B are irrelevant after the incident
If A maintained separation as B maneuvered A was fulfilled her obligation under 18.2
Very Very slim chance I would say A failed to keep clear
and "Real Talk" if a boat didn't think it was fouled at time I am rarely going to decided they were later if it's in question...
Assuming these are spin keel boats with a 3x ratio of BL/BW, this is what I think OP describes as the facts when B was 1 boat length from the mark. 1/4 boat width equates to 1/12 boat length. Each square is 1 boat length.
1/4 BL makes a big difference and would change my inclination that A did not provide room for B to maneuver
Thanks for pointing out my error. - Ang
Here is 1/4 BL separation ..
I did say 1/4 boat width earlier but when I see to two pictures above I would say the bottom one better represents the situation just before the leeward boat began heading up to make the mark.
When you have a boat who is 1/2 BL wide, 1/4 of a BL above the line, then they have to make more room in the final maneuver and the very wide sterns and bows remove clearance during the move (as pinched ends provide more clearance for turns).
Here is my wag ... what you think Daniel?
for what it may be worth, in that diagram, green does not manage to maintain 1/4 BL separation.
I know. It's the best separation that I thought I could give them when doing the drawing from the starting with 1/4 BL separation 1 BL from the mark in light winds (in other words, I drew it as generous as I thought I could). Given how stubby an Opti is and it's propensity to slip sideways due to it's small centerboard ... I don't think it's possible for them to start with and maintain 1/4 BL separation during this maneuver due to the bow/stern swings and lack of wind/momentum.
If you try to draw it, I think you will see what I mean. These aren't Solings.
The only modification that need to be made are:
In a protest hearing, it's very unlikely that you will get good sound evidence allowing you to find facts down to a decimal digit of a boat dimension: likewise, you should be very cautious about scaling from a diagram.
That said, once OP said the outside boat maintained at least 1/4 boat length distance from inside, I think it was all over: Outside gave mark-room (and kept clear) throughout.
What I'm seeing in the latest (opti) diagram is G is keeping clear at every position: Y can change course in either direction without immediately making contact.
Y does not change course from @2 to @3, that is, when she luffed to shoot the mark between @1 and @2, she just didn't come up far enough, didn't realise that it was insufficient, and while there was room for hear to come up still further didn't do so, and touched the mark.
On the other hand, if it was more like 1/4BW (only 1/4BW closer) separation at 1 BL away, given how wide Opti's are front and back, it's feasible that W might not have provided L room to turn to try to make the mark.
The drawings were just to visualize what was being described .. something that I imagine would have been done with physical models in the protest hearing.
The OP's original question was .. " I am curious as to what arguments each boat can and should make at the end of the day".
(PS: To state the obvious, the "arguments each boat can and should make" is to say what happened to the best of their recollection and not modify what they say to win in the room. So below, is what their recollections could be, owing to an honest difference of opinion and different perspective/POV of the events, that might support either A or B's cases during a hearing).
A's Case: There was no contact so A's case is simply she always provided room for B to maneuver. Using the models A would show that she started with a 1/4 BL separation .. and though that wasn't maintained at the extremes of the maneuvers, B always had room to change course further and therefore A kept clear and provided mark room. A would likely state (or be asked in the room) what the distance was between her and the mark as she rounded. For instance, the drawing is showing ~1.5BW's mark-clearance, which (if the drawing is accepted as descriptive of both boats' paths) seems adequate.
B's Case: I think B would have to show in the room, with models or a different drawing, that A was closer at points which prevented B from turning to windward to round. If the separation was only 1/4BW and overlapped 50% (instead of 1/4BL like in the drawing), then B would have to show that she wasn't free to change course such that he could give A an opportunity to keep-clear, avoid contact with A and round the mark in a seamanlike way. By having to turn more slowly to give A opportunity to match B's turn, limited by the bow/stern swings, that limit made the difference in B hitting the mark, thus A wasn't keeping-clear, providing mark-room or both. Since B doesn't have any contact between the boats to prove it, B would have to show it with the models/drawing. Also, maybe B would show/argue that, due to her necessary path around the mark from her 1BL away and 1BW below position, she needed closer to 1 BL clearance than 1 BW clearance as she tried to shoot the mark.
Note: This description is consistent with two rules applications:
B's turn to talk ..
"OK ..so .... I think A has it close to correct in steps 1-3 as he tells it, though I saw it a little differently. I agree that it's unclear if we were inside/outside the 3BL zone, it was close but probably outside. When I complete my tack reaching close hauled course, I was about 1/4 BL ahead of A, but her speed carried her past me quickly and by the time we reached 1BL from the mark, we were overlapped with A about 1/2 BL ahead.
I would agree that when I finished my tack she was 1/4 BL above me and A being on the layline, this put my windward rail at or below the layline, but I started to work up a little after I completed my tack while my bow was slightly forward, so when we reached the 1BL distance from the mark, I had worked my way to weather and closer to A. I was only about 1/4 BW to leeward of A, closing about 1/2 the distance. A being ahead of me, it was easier for me to keep my eye on both the mark and A, so I could see that she wasn't watching me 100% and as I closed this distance, A did not match my moves to maintain her separation to windward of me.
After I passed 1BL from the mark, I turned up as far as I could, but as A turned away, I had to stop my turn and even turn down a little to provide room for A's transom swing. Since I was able to do so, I avoided contact with A. So, I did this a couple times .. turned-up watching and stopping short of A's transom and stopping or even dropping down slightly to keep clear of her transom as she headed-up in response. I was successful in avoiding A, but as I turned down that last time to avoid A's transom, my leeward rail grazed the mark. Though A did provide just over 1 BW around the mark, my approach angle to the mark required more than just barely 1 BW.
A protested me, but I didn't protest back as I knew we could sort it out in her protest. I did not do a penalty turn because A didn't provide me room to sail my course around the mark and I would be exonerated for hitting the mark.
A allowing the boats to get within 1/4BW was restricting my ability to turn-up as far as I needed to round the mark."
This may be your last chance to ask A’s representatives any questions.
Are you sure you don’t want to ask anything about:
Looking back, I see that you reduced A's testimony and took out a lot of stuff from OP's A-scenario (some filled in after Q's from me), importantly that A maintained her 1/4 BL separation throughout.
Let me try to flush my brain of this scenario's investigation and start anew.
Q: Are we assuming that A provided either the drawing or used models to place the boats as shown in the last drawing in the thread?
5. About 1 BL from the mark B pinched up to shoot the mark and I responded to keep separation
Let's say A's protest form diagram was the second one you suggested
And showed on the models similarly to the Opti diagram, but exaggerating the separation a little.