Spring Keel at St. Francis Yacht ClubMarch 3 - 4
Result
PosBoatTotalRace 1Race 2Race 3
1Witchy Woman6213
2Motorcycle Irene9126
3Baffett10631
4Wile E Coyote15744
5Magic Bus17458
6Xena18972
7El Raton193115
8Moxie20569
9Bessie Jay3112127
10Mirage3111911
11Peaches3214810
12Elise35131012
13Kolibri3781415
14Opa!39101514
14Wild Mojo41151313
15Radio Flyer4916DNF16
export csv

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Author: Brendan Busch ([email protected]) contact the author
Subject: TackTicks
Info: (28263 views) Posted: Thursday 11-3-05 07:42:43 AM
I use the big TackTicks. I couldn't recommend them highly enough. The RaceMaster is the compass-only unit. It is easy to read (two displays, one for each tack), extremely accurate, and incredibly reliable. I used the same unit for 3 Worrell 1000s (1000 ocean miles on a beach catamaran), and it worked flawlessly the whole time. Nothing could compare as a test of waterproofness and reliability, as every other piece of electronic gear (Garmin GPS, Icom Radios) failed despite being in waterproof bags. The night light will run all night, and the compass requires NO WIRING. This compass was our main source of navigation and it was bulletproof.

Since I already had a compass, I bought a second unit - the SpeedMaster - as a speedo. Just as easy to read, just as reliable. Plus, it worked just fine with my existing transducers (originally a KVH Quadro system that never worked fine). Again, no battery required, but it does need wiring to the transducers. The depth guage isn't so hot (only reads about 15 feet or less), but it also isn't wired meticulously (they say you shouldn't shorten the depth gauge transducer wire). I've found the night light _doesn't_ go all night on the SpeedMaster (presumably because powering the transducers takes a little juice). We'd have to recharge the batteries with a flashlight at night. Otherwise, it is just as highly recommended as the compass. With these two instruments I can race bouys without a house battery on board.

These two units have huge displays and work great. Sensitivity is perfect without doing any adjustment. They have countdown timers for the starts. They pop out of their brackets for safe keeping in seconds.

You can get them combined into one unit in the SailMaster.

The only downside of these instruments is they are _expensive_. I orded them out of England and they were quite a bit cheaper than anywhere in the US. Can't find the shop just now. I've never needed service on them (going on 6 years for the compass), so no comment on customer service.

BTW, TackTick has a very cool and lightweight wireless system now, but beware--probably violates class rules on "integrated electronics".

--brendan
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  • TackTicks (28264 views) [x] (current)
    Brendan Busch ~ Thursday 11-3-05 07:42:43 AM
    • TackTicks (28701 views) [x]
      Jason Crowson ~ Thursday 11-3-05 09:52:41 PM
      • TackTicks (20025 views) [x]
        Bob Harvey ~ Wednesday 11-9-05 04:21:08 PM
        • TackTicks (19986 views) [x]
          Will Paxton ~ Wednesday 11-9-05 10:52:17 PM
          • TackTicks (19986 views) [x]
            Paul Deeds ~ Wednesday 11-16-05 03:00:48 PM
            • TackTicks (19741 views) [x]
              Bob Doerr ~ Thursday 11-24-05 02:50:34 PM
              • TackTicks (27639 views) [x]
                Tibor Ipavic ~ Monday 12-12-05 01:08:36 PM
                • TackTicks (27089 views) [x]
                  Mark Lowry ~ Friday 12-30-05 11:24:58 AM