Hi Dave, Interesting. The boat sure does better relative to a lot of
other boats at the extremes--heavy and very light wind. And, in
addition to the conditions, as you know, the raw number for one boat
doesn't mean a whole lot without looking at the differentials between
the E27 and the other boats in the area. Crew weight is also
critical. We have no limits on crew weight in our PHRF rule, as I
guess most don't. To do well in PHRF in any kind of wind you need to
have a lot of crew weight 1000-1100 pounds. So, boats who are having
trouble sailing to their rating might try adding another body or two
to the rail.
This year a boat from our fleet raced in Key West, and they were
disadvantaged by three factors--(1)not enough crew weight; (2) by the
fact that on a couple of days when the wind was under 5 knots and our
guys might have had an advantage, the RC didn't start the races; and
(3) they were given a 135 rating and were racing against T10s rated
132. In decent air 3 sec/mile isn't enough for an E27 to race even
with a Tartan 10. Waves are another factor. My impression is that
Express 27s do better in smooth water (beat) than in a chop. At any
rate a chop really separates the best from the average helmsmen.
We get all kinds of wind on Lake St. Clair, probably not too
different from your home waters on Lake Erie, maybe a bit lighter.
They say the average wind speed is 8 knots. And we frequently get an
ugly, steep chop depending on wind direction. I have heard that our
conditions are similar to those on Long Island Sound and New England.
As I said above, the times we have done best in PHRF are when the
wind blows really hard or only 2-3 knots. In between we aren't
spectacular.