David: Ah! So that’s what that thing was between the buoyancy tanks in your earlier post – a centreboard serving as a thwart. Never seen that before, and didn’t guess. Very cunning original idea – two marks for that – though maybe too much of a good thing, and might need to be re-visited. I have also never seen a low aspect ratio dagger board before – I rather like it. I still think only one is needed. This is shaping up to be a proper contender – not the prettiest boat in the pond, but starting to tick the boxes. Three extra marks for clever economical use of materials, both plywood and alloy tube. I am having a little trouble visualising the forward area, the “mast support” and partners?
Arne – a very pretty little praam dinghy, which now meets what I think should be the criteria for a JRA dinghy. Arne grudgingly wrote: “I am… not a JR priest” Absolutely, well put Arne, point taken, and this has been my concern about a junk rigged tender from the outset. Unfortunately, irrational as it may be, I think a JRA dinghy must have some form of JR, otherwise there is little point in the competition. This will force the contestants to really get down to some minimalist thinking and try to find a way to make a 2-minute junk rig which is functional and easy to dismantle and re-assemble without causing frustration - and in addition, I now think the criteria should state that it must be capable of sailing to windward. If all this proves to be impractical, then I still say look instead at a proper junket boat – but this near-impossible brief may yet produce something innovative.
Interesting to see these two quite different concepts evolving. The one point of similarity seems to be a wish to dispense with the rudder. This would be a learning experience for me – and a long overdue one, I dare say – I admire sculling over the stern and ashamed to admit I never learned to do it. Thanks Arne and David for each suggesting this as an additional motivation, I really must. Its true, carrying a rudder around and trying to stow it somewhere is a curse, unless you are actually sailing. Ditto centreboard and maybe even more so leeboard. Maybe using the board for a thwart really does have merit.
Thanks David and Arne for your creativity – I doff my cap to you both and look forward to further details (more details needed – that’s where the devil is lurking) and I don’t envy the judging committee. Hopefully there are more designs in the offing – and that breakthrough which has not yet been reached, though progress has been made – the radical 2-minute micro JR.
PS Arne - The smallest boat with the world's largest fish-gutting board! - do I detect a sour note? (If there's one thing I hate on a sailboat, its fishing gear, gets in the road and tangles up with everything.)