port tack
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Whats the verdict after a couple years? Looks like a good bit of them for sale right now.
Well Damn tell me how you really think. Lol.It was designed to do a lot of things and does none of them well
It's heavy, tender, requires a full crew to push hard, requires a large suit of sails, rates poorly, and isn't particularly well set up for any kind of racing.
Not sure why you would think that. Alchemy was 8/14 in class 15 and in Class 18 Eagle was 5/10 while wings went 8/10 and Ace retired.Looked like they did well in Newport to Bermuda!
111 rig too short? It’s one of the highest aspect rigs on the course and less than two feet shorter than a 120 rig. It’s also the best light air boat J Boats has designed in at least 3 decades. Unfortunately, the 121 and 99 did not follow that trend.Its like they sort of got away with making the rig too short on the 111 and thought, hey, I wonder how much farther we can go?
I just spent the weekend looking at the front of a 111 from the cockpit of a 109, in light air. And that was not much of a change from doing the same on my Schock 35.111 rig too short? It’s one of the highest aspect rigs on the course and less than two feet shorter than a 120 rig. It’s also the best light air boat J Boats has designed in at least 3 decades. Unfortunately, the 121 and 99 did not follow that trend.
I really want to love to the 121, but...
That's funny, because I just spent the weekend looking at the stern of two 109s when the breeze was 12-17 after the 109s found the breeze first, but as soon as it got light we passed them both. Twice. (current and no breeze does create a shuffle sometimes). Too be fair, I wouldn't draw much of anything from that race as the current and big wind holes were far more impactful than raw boat speed. A Hotfoot 27 and J/30 beat both the 109s and the 111s.I just spent the weekend looking at the front of a 111 from the cockpit of a 109, in light air. And that was not much of a change from doing the same on my Schock 35.
Once the breeze is up over 14 or so the 111s are great and they take off.
I don't think it's too hard to infer the rigs could have been 3 or 4 feet taller.
I think it says a lot that a J/122 beat all of the stock J/121s on elapsed time in the Bermuda Race this past year which was certainly an "adventure"^ I would too. J Boats marketed it to be a boat for "adventure" type courses, never claiming it to be a good W/L boat. Yes the rig is a bit heavy. I suspect it's sectioned to fit into a 40' shipping container or at the very least strapped to the deck for cargo transport. Saved me money when trucking 1500 miles!
I disagree, the J122 was the best light air boat that Jboats designed in the last 3 decades.111 rig too short? It’s one of the highest aspect rigs on the course and less than two feet shorter than a 120 rig. It’s also the best light air boat J Boats has designed in at least 3 decades.
The results in PNW (predominantly light air) do not support that. We do have two J/122s that have had some great results, but not in light air. One of those won Van Isle 360 a few years ago and Vic Maui and are back for Van Isle 360 again against 4 J/111s, so we might get some good data. The J/122 rates just slightly slower in general than the J/111 in ORC, so we will see them plenty and should have a range of conditions over 9 legs and 750nm.I disagree, the J122 was the best light air boat that Jboats designed in the last 3 decades.
That 111 was very poorly sailed then. Well sailed 111's are untouchable by 109's(and many other boats) in under 8 knots of breeze. If the 109's are using class sails(in that breeze) they will get lapped by a 111.I just spent the weekend looking at the front of a 111 from the cockpit of a 109, in light air. And that was not much of a change from doing the same on my Schock 35.
Once the breeze is up over 14 or so the 111s are great and they take off.
I don't think it's too hard to infer the rigs could have been 3 or 4 feet taller.