Hola amigos !!!
Quiero preguntarle esto:
Obstrucción:
Un objeto que un barco no podría pasar sin cambiar sustancialmente de rumbo, si navegara directamente hacia él y UNA de las esloras de su casco de él.
En la posición N ° 1, B es una obstrucción para Y (regla 11) ... están en casi UNO de sus esloras de casco.
MI PREGUNTA ES:
¿El verde es una obstrucción para B e Y en la posición N ° 1 (regla 10)?
Podemos ver este otro caso en el Libro de Casos RYA
1974/5 DECISIÓN
Se
confirma la decisión del comité de protestas de descalificar a PW.
El comité de protestas decidió correctamente que S , cerrado, mantener el derecho de paso bajo la regla 10, ERA UNA OBSTRUCCIÓN, según se define, a PL.
Obstruction:
An object that a ship could not pass without substantially changing course, if it were sailing directly towards it and ONE of its hull lengths from it.
At position # 1, B is an obstruction for Y (rule 11) ... they are at almost ONE of their hull lengths.
MY QUESTION IS:
Is green an obstruction for B and Y at position # 1 (rule 10)?
RYA-1962-8.jpg 62.8 KB
We can see this other case in the RYA Casebook
1974/5 DECISION
I know
confirms the protest committee's decision to disqualify PW.
The protest committee correctly decided that S, closed, maintaining right of way under rule 10, WAS AN OBSTRUCTION, as defined, to PL.
OBSTACULO-ENGLES.jpg 118 KB
Created: Today 04:23
Comments
I do not know what would not be an obstruction, based on that. A broomstick at one boat length would require a significant course change for a boat with a wide beam.
(I have heard one of the rule writers admit it is a weak definition needing work.)
An obstruction does not need to actually be within one boat length's distance to exist and impact ROW.
Rule 20 beguins when we have an obstruction.
So in this case, Green is an obstruction at position N°3...not earlier.
.......at 8Knts, 30 feet boats has only 2 seconds before the CRASH
Thanks Paco Quinonero !!!
You are so kind !!!
I have two things more, please:
a)
In the first picture, in position N°1, is Green an obstruction for Blue ?
b)
In the second picture, in position N°2 is Green an obstruction for B, Y and Red ?
THANKS YOU SO MUCH !!!!
Thanks for the little excursion into Spanish. I am studying Spanish and find it very interesting. I often think that some difficulties people whose mother tongue is not English have with rules, particularly Definitions comes from either nuances between different languages, or the way in which the rules have been translated from English.
I guess that we're lucky that Catalan posted his question in Castilian and not Catalan.
It's also interesting that, as a beginner, I could easily translate Catalan's post, but Paco's post was much more difficult.
Would that be because Catalan used Google Translate, while Paco was drafting in idomatic Spanish 'rules-speak'?
Anyway, thanks for the Spanish lesson.
You seem to be missing the point of the explanations given by Phil and Paco.
The test in the definition of Obstruction is to be applied anywhere, any time. It is theoretical, or hypothetical. it does not depend on the actual relative positions of boats in any given situation.
If an object is of such a size that a boat sailing directly towards it would need to substantially change course to pass it hen one hull length away, it is an obstruction.
It matters not whether an obstruction actually 'obstructs' a boat in any given scenario.
Except in the case of boats of hugely different sizes (for example Commanche and an Optimist dinghy) a right-of-way boat will always be an obstruction to a give way boat.
Whether a boat is actually obstructed is taken care of by the 'when the rule applies' part of the relevant rules. For example, the obligations of Rule 19 apply when boats are 'at' an obstruction and the entitlement of a boat to hail for room to tack begins when a boat is approaching an obstruction and will soon need to make a substantial course change.
In your latest diagram, G is an obstruction for R, Y and B for as long as they have been on opposite tacks, but provisions of rules 19 and 20 will only begin to operate when boats are close together.
Thanks you ALL so much !!!!!!!!
Obviously, my initiative failed. There were several reasons for this: (1) "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." (Catalan, that's just an expression. It's not grammatical.) The definition is not causing real-world problems, so far as we know -- for example, Optis don't think iron pipes are obstructions; (2) In some situations, the obstruction doesn't actually obstruct the boats involved, but we want rule 19 to apply anyway (for example, boats running two boatlengths away from and parallel to a seawall are passing an obstruction); and (3) I couldn't come up with a better definition that worked in all the places the current definition works.