Summary
of the Rules That Apply When Boats Meet
Simplified,
Condensed, Unofficial
Below is a
summary of the sailing rules that apply most often on the race course. This summary is intended as an aid to sailors and not as a
substitute for the Racing Rules of Sailing, a copy of which all
racing sailors should own. See
reverse side for more information about the Racing Rules of Sailing.
RIGHT-OF-WAY RULES
PORT-STARBOARD.
Port-tack
boats must keep clear of starboard-tack boats.
(Rule 10)
Note:
You are "keeping clear" of another boat when she doesn't have
to avoid you.
WINDWARD-LEEWARD. When
boats are overlapped on the same tack, the windward boat must keep clear.
(Rule 11)
ON
SAME TACK, ASTERN-AHEAD. When
boats are on the same tack and not overlapped, the boat clear astern must keep
clear.
(Rule 12) Note:
One boat is "clear astern" if she's entirely behind a line
through the other boat's aft-most point, perpendicular to the other boat.
The other boat is "clear ahead."
Two boats are "overlapped" if neither is clear ahead of the
other.
TACKING
TOO CLOSE. Before
you tack, make sure your tack will keep you clear of all other boats.
(Rule 13)
LIMITATIONS
ON RIGHT OF WAY
If
the other boat must keep clear, you have "right of way". Even if you
have right of way, there are limitations on what you can do:
AVOID
CONTACT. You
must avoid contact with other boats, but a right-of-way boat will not be
penalized under this rule unless the contact causes damage.
(Rule 14)
ACQUIRING
RIGHT OF WAY. When
you do something to become the right-of-way boat, you must give the other boat
a chance to get away from you.
(Rule 15)
CHANGING
COURSE. When
you change course, you must give the other boat a chance to keep clear.
(Rule 16)
ON
THE SAME TACK; PROPER COURSE. If
you are overlapped to leeward of a boat on the same tack, and if just before
the overlap began you were clear astern of her, you cannot sail above your
proper course (i.e., the course that will take you to the next mark the
fastest) while you remain overlapped. (Rule
17.1)
PASSING MARKS AND OBSTRUCTIONS
There
is a set of special rules for boats that are about to pass a mark or
obstruction. However, these
special rules don't apply between boats on opposite tacks on a beat to
windward. (Rule
18.1)
Except
at a starting mark, you must give boats overlapped inside you room to pass a
mark or obstruction, and boats clear astern must keep clear of you.
There's
a two-length zone around marks and obstructions, and a boat's rights and
obligations with respect to another boat are "frozen" when the first
of them enters that zone. If you
are clear astern of another boat when she enters the zone, you must keep clear
of her until both boats are past the mark or obstruction, even if you later
become overlapped inside her.
(Rule 18.2)
TACKING
NEAR A MARK. Don't
tack within the two-length zone at a windward mark if you will cause a boat
that is fetching the mark to sail above close-hauled to avoid you, or if you
will prevent her from passing the mark.
(Rule 18.3)
ROOM
TO TACK AT AN OBSTRUCTION. When
boats are on the same tack on a beat and come to an obstruction, the leeward
boat gets to decide which way they are going to pass it.
If the leeward boat hails for room to tack, the other boat must give it
to her; but the leeward boat must give the
other boat time to respond before she tacks. (Rule
19)
OTHER RULES
Before
your Preparatory Signal, and after you finish, don't interfere with boats that
are about to start or are racing. (Rule
22.1)
If
you break a rule while racing, get away from other boats and do two 360-degree
turns; if you hit a mark, do one turn. (Rules
20 and 44) Note:
Sometimes the Sailing Instructions require you to fly a flag
acknowledging that you broke a rule, instead of doing turns.
(Rule 44)
If
you start too soon, keep clear of others until you get behind the line again.
(Rules 20 and 29)
Copyright
© 2001 United States Sailing Association