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LOS ANGELES---An unexpected development
has prompted the Transpacific Yacht Club board of directors
to remove the rating limit for the fastest boats seeking
first-to-finish "Barn Door" honors and possibly
an elapsed time record in this summer's 44th Transpac from
Los Angeles to Honolulu. The new eligibility limits will
now allow boats up to 30 meters (98.5 feet) in length overall
(LOA) to compete in their maximum configuration.
Big boats drive off the line in 2005
The Transpac race has had a rating limit based on the slightly
smaller maxZ86 class (87 feet LOA). A special rating system
was used to rate yachts near that limit. The design offices
of Juan Kouyoumdjian and Reichel/Pugh discovered significant
loop holes in that rating system which resulted in a large
unfair rating advantage for their first-to-finish contenders.
Given
the short time for first-to-finish yachts to adjust their
configurations to the limit, the Transpac board of directors
elected to follow parallel paths to simultaneously: (1)
request correction of the rating system in favor of fleet-wide
fair ratings and (2) delete the rating portion of the eligibility
limit so that first-to-finish contenders can complete their
configuration changes while the rating system is corrected.
The
Notice of Race is being revised to state that monohull yachts
with lengths between 26 feet and 30 meters, which meet the
other race requirements, are eligible for entry in the 2007
Transpac. The eligibility limit now is based on maximum
LOA and qualification under the other standards, common
to all entries, listed in the Notice of Race. The rating
is now immaterial to qualifying for entry at the upper end
of the fleet.
Transpac Commodore Al Garnier said, "We regret making
such significant changes so close to the race, but under
the circumstances we believe it was the best way to keep
the race as fair as possible for everyone."
Two maxZ86s set the pace in the 2005 race. Hasso Plattner's
Morning Glory logged an elapsed time record for monohulls
of 6 days 16 hours 4 minutes 11 seconds and finished about
2 1/2 hours ahead of Roy E. Disney's Pyewacket.
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