| 3.01 |
Strength of Build, Ballast and
Rig |
| |
Yachts shall be strongly built,
watertight and, particularly with regard to hulls, decks and
cabin trunks capable of withstanding solid water and knockdowns.
They must be properly rigged and ballasted, be fully seaworthy
and must meet the standards set forth herein. Shrouds shall
never be disconnected. |
| 3.02 |
Watertight Integrity of a Hull |
| 3.02.1 |
A hull, including, deck, coach
roof, windows, hatches and all other parts, shall form an
integral, essentially watertight unit and any openings in it
shall be capable of being immediately secured to maintain this
integrity. |
| 3.02.2 |
Centreboard and daggerboard
trunks and the like shall not open into the interior of a hull
except via a watertight inspection/maintenance hatch of which
the opening shall be entirely above the waterline of the yacht
floating level in normal trim. |
| 3.02.3 |
A canting keel
pivot shall be completely contained within a watertight
enclosure which shall comply with OSR 3.02.2. Access points in
the watertight enclosure for control and actuation systems or
any other purpose shall comply with OSR 3.02.1. |
| 3.02.4 |
Moveable ballast
systems shall be fitted with a manual control and actuation
secondary system which shall be capable of controlling the full
sailing load of the keel in the event of failure of the primary
system. Such failures would include electrical and hydraulic
failure and mechanical failure of the components and the
structure to which it mounts. The system must be capable of
being operational quickly and shall be operable at any angle of
heel. It would be desirable if this system was capable of
securing the keel on the centreline. |
| 3.03 |
Hull Construction Standards
(Scantlings) |
| |
Table 2 |
| |
| LOA |
earliest of age or series
date |
race category |
|
| 3.03.1 |
A yacht defined in the table
above shall have been designed and built in accordance with
either: |
| |
| a) |
the EC Recreational Craft
Directive for Category A (having obtained the CE mark),
or |
|
| |
| b) |
the ABS Guide for
Building and Classing Offshore Yachts in which case the
yacht shall have on board either a certificate of plan
approval issued by ABS, or written statements signed by
the designer and builder which confirm that they have
respectively designed and built the yacht in accordance
with the ABS Guide, |
|
| |
| c) |
except
that a race organizer and class rules may accept other
evidence of suitability of design and build when that
described in (a) or (b) above is not available, provided
that the requirements of (a) or (b) have never been
refused due to unsuitability of the boat. |
|
|
US
SAILING prescribes that 3.03.1(c) shall not apply in 2007. |
| 3.03.2 |
Any significant repairs or
modifications to the hull, deck, coachroof, keel or appendages,
on a yacht defined in table 2 shall be certified by one of the
methods above and an appropriate written statement or statements
shall be on board. |
| 3.04 |
Stability - Monohulls |
| 3.04.2 |
A yacht shall be designed and
built to resist capsize. |
| 3.04.3 |
A National Authority or race
organizer should require compliance with a minimum stability or
stability/buoyancy index. Attention is drawn to the stability
index in IMS Regulation 201. |
| 3.04.4 |
Achievement of Design Category
A under ISO 12217-2 may be accepted by a race organizer as a
guide to general suitability for competition in a Special
Regulations Category 2 race. |
| 3.04.5 |
Use of the ISO or any other
index does not guarantee total safety or total freedom of risk
from capsize or sinking. |
| 3.04.6 |
For boats with
moveable or variable ballast the method in OSR 3.04.4 shall
apply plus the relevant additional requirement of OSR Appendix
K. |
| 3.04.7 |
Tanks for
variable ballast shall be permanently installed and shall be
provided with a system of isolating valves and pump(s) capable
of manual operation at any angle of heel. A plan of the plumbing
system shall be displayed aboard the boat |
| 3.06 |
Exits - Monohulls |
| |
TABLE 4 |
| |
| LOA |
Earliest of Age or Series
Date |
Detail |
| 8.5 m (28 ft) and over |
1/95 and after |
Yachts shall have at
least two exits. At least one exit shall be located
forward of the foremost mast except where structural
features prevent its installation. |
|
| 3.07.1 |
Exits |
| 3.08 |
Hatches & Companionways |
| 3.08.1 |
No hatch forward
of the maximum beam station shall open in such a way that the
lid or cover moves into the open position towards the interior
of the hull (excepting ports having an area of less than 0.071m2
(110 sq in)). |
| 3.08.2 |
A hatch shall be: |
| |
| a) |
so
arranged as to be above the water when the hull is
heeled 90 degrees |
|
| |
|
|
US
SAILING prescribes that 3.08.2(a) shall not apply in 2007. |
| |
| c) |
capable of being firmly
shut immediately and remaining firmly shut in a 180
degree capsize (inversion) |
|
| 3.08.3 |
A companionway hatch extending
below the local sheerline, shall: |
| |
| a) |
not be permitted in a
yacht with a cockpit opening aft to the sea (OSR 3.09.6) |
|
| |
| b) |
be capable of being
blocked off up to the level of the local sheerline,
provided that the companionway hatch shall continue to
give access to the interior with the blocking devices
(e.g. washboards) in place |
|
| 3.08.4 |
A companionway hatch shall: |
| |
| a) |
be fitted with a strong
securing arrangement which shall be operable from the
exterior and interior including when the yacht is
inverted |
|
| |
| b) |
have any blocking devices |
|
| |
| |
i |
capable of being retained
in position with the hatch open or shut |
|
| |
| |
ii |
whether or not in
position in the hatchway, secured to the yacht (e.g. by
lanyard) for the duration of the race, to prevent their
being lost overboard |
|
| |
| |
iii |
permit exit in the event
of inversion |
|
| 3.09 |
Cockpits - Attention is Drawn
to ISO 11812 |
| 3.09.1 |
Cockpits shall be structurally
strong, self-draining quickly by gravity at all angles of heel
and permanently incorporated as an integral part of the hull. |
| 3.09.2 |
Cockpits must be essentially
watertight, that is, all openings to the hull must be capable of
being strongly and rigidly secured |
| 3.09.3 |
A bilge pump outlet pipe shall
not be connected to a cockpit drain . See OSR 3.09.8 for cockpit
drain minimum sizes |
| 3.09.4 |
A cockpit sole shall be at least
2% LWL above LWL (or in IMS yachts first launched before 1/03,
at least 2% L above LWL) |
| 3.09.5 |
A bow, lateral, central or stern
well shall be considered a cockpit for the purposes of OSR 3.09 |
| 3.09.6 |
In cockpits opening aft to the
sea structural openings aft shall be not less in area than 50%
maximum cockpit depth x maximum cockpit width. |
| 3.09.7 |
Cockpit Volume |
| |
TABLE 5 |
| |
| earliest of age or series
date |
detail |
race category |
|
| 3.09.8 |
Cockpit Drains |
| |
See OSR 3.09.1. Cockpit drain
cross section area (after allowance for screens if fitted) shall
be:- |
| |
| a) |
in yachts with earliest
of age or series date before 1/72 or in any yacht under
8.5m (28ft) LOA - at least that of 2 x 25mm diameter
(one inch) unobstructed openings or equivalent |
|
| |
| b) |
in yachts with earliest
of age or series date 1/72 and later - at least that of
4 x 20mm diameter (3/4 inch) unobstructed openings or
equivalent |
|
| |
US SAILING prescribes that
cockpit drains shall be accessible for cleaning |
| 3.10 |
Sea Cocks or Valves |
| |
Sea cocks or valves shall be
permanently installed on all through-hull openings below LWL
except integral deck scuppers, speed indicators, depth finders
and the like, however a means of closing such openings shall be
provided. |
| 3.11 |
Sheet Winches |
| |
Sheet winches shall be mounted in
such a way that an operator is not required to be substantially
below deck. |
| 3.12 |
Mast Step |
| |
The heel of a keel stepped mast
shall be securely fastened to the mast step or adjoining
structure. |
| 3.13 |
Watertight Bulkheads |
| |
see also OSR 3.05 |
| 3.14 |
Pulpits, Stanchions, Lifelines
- Attention is Drawn to ISO 15085 |
| 3.14.2 |
Lifelines required in Special
Regulations shall be "taut". |
| |
| a) |
As a guide, when a
deflecting force of 50 N (5.1 kgf, 11.2 lbf) is applied
to a lifeline midway between supports, the lifeline
should not deflect more than 50 mm. |
|
| 3.14.3 |
The following shall be provided: |
| |
| a) |
a bow pulpit forward of
the headstay (however on yachts under 8.5 m (28 ft) the
bow pulpit may be aft of the headstay provided the
forward upper rail is within 405 mm (16 in) of the
headstay) with vertical height and openings essentially
conforming to Table 7 Bow pulpits may be open but the
opening between the pulpit and any part of the boat
shall never be greater than 360mm (14.2") (this
requirement shall be checked by presenting a 360mm
(14.2") circle inside the opening) |
|
| |
| b) |
a stern pulpit, or
lifelines arranged as an adequate substitute, with
vertical openings conforming to Table 7 |
|
| |
| c) |
lifelines (guardlines)
supported on stanchions, which, with pulpits, shall form
an effectively continuous barrier around a working deck
for man-overboard prevention. Lifelines shall be
permanently supported at intervals of not more than
2.20m (86.6") and shall not pass outboard of
supporting stanchions |
|
| |
| d) |
upper rails of pulpits at
no less height above the working deck than the upper
lifelines as in Table 7. |
|
| |
| e) |
Openable upper rails in
bow pulpits shall be secured shut whilst racing |
|
| |
| f) |
Pulpits and stanchions
shall be permanently installed. When there are sockets
or studs, these shall be through-bolted, bonded or
welded. The pulpit(s) and/or stanchions fitted to these
shall be mechanically retained without the help of the
life-lines. Without sockets or studs, pulpits and/or
stanchions shall be through-bolted, bonded or welded. |
|
| |
| g) |
The bases of pulpits and
stanchions shall not be further inboard from the edge of
the appropriate working deck than 5% of maximum beam or
150 mm (6 in), whichever is greater. |
|
| |
| h) |
Stanchion bases shall not
be situated outboard of a working deck. For the purpose
of this rule a stanchion or pulpit base shall be taken
to include a sleeve or socket into which a stanchion or
pulpit tube is fitted but shall exclude a baseplate
which carries fixings into the deck or hull. |
|
| |
| i) |
Provided the complete
lifeline enclosure is supported by stanchions and pulpit
bases effectively within the working deck, lifeline
terminals and support struts may be fixed to a hull aft
of the working deck |
|
| |
| j) |
Lifelines need not be
fixed to a bow pulpit if they terminate at, or pass
through, adequately braced stanchions set inside and
overlapping the bow pulpit, provided that the gap
between the upper lifeline and the bow pulpit does not
exceed 150 mm (6 in). |
|
| |
| k) |
Stanchions shall be
straight and vertical except that:- |
|
| |
| i) |
within the first 50 mm (2
in) from the deck, stanchions shall not be displaced
horizontally from the point at which they emerge from
the deck or stanchion base by more than 10 mm (3/8
in),and |
|
| |
| ii) |
stanchions may be angled
to not more than 10 degrees from vertical at any point
above 50 mm (2 in) from the deck. |
|
| 3.14.5 |
Lifeline Height, Vertical
Openings, Number of Lifelines |
| |
TABLE 7 |
| |
| LOA |
earliest of
age/seriesdate |
minimum requirements |
Category |
| under 8.5 m(28 ft) |
before1/92 |
taut single lifeline at a
height of no less than 450 mm (18 in) above the working
deck. No vertical opening shall exceed 560 mm (22 in). |
** |
| under 8.5 m(28 ft) |
1/92and after |
as for under 8.5 m(28 ft)
in table 7 above, except that when an intermediate
lifeline is fitted no vertical opening shall exceed 380
mm (15 in). |
** |
| 8.5 m (28 ft) and over |
before1/93 |
taut double lifeline with
upper lifeline at a height of no less than 600 mm (24
in) above the working deck. No vertical opening shall
exceed 560 mm (22 in) |
** |
| 8.5 m (28 ft)and over |
1/93 and after |
as 8.5 m (28 ft) and over
in Table 7 above, except that no vertical opening shall
exceed 380 mm (15 in). |
** |
| all |
all |
on yachts with
intermediate lifelines the intermediate line shall be
not less than 230 mm (9 in) above the working deck and
shall be of the same construction and general
arrangements as required for the upper. |
** |
|
| 3.14.6 |
Lifeline Minimum Diameters,
Required Materials, Specifications |
| |
| a) |
All
lifelines shall be stranded stainless steel wire of
minimum diameter in table 8 below. Lifelines shall be
uncoated and used without close-fitting sleeving. |
|
| |
Notwithstanding 3.14.6 (a),
temporary sleeving may be fitted provided it is regularly
removed for inspection |
| |
| b) |
Grade 316 stainless
wire is recommended. |
|
| |
| c) |
A taut lanyard of
synthetic rope may be used to secure lifelines provided
the gap it closes does not exceed 100 mm (4 in). |
|
| |
| d) |
All wire, fittings,
anchorage points, fixtures and lanyards shall comprise a
lifeline enclosure system which has at all points at
least the breaking strength of the required lifeline
wire. |
|
| |
TABLE 8 |
| |
| LOA |
minimum wire diameter |
| under 8.5 m (28ft) |
3 mm (1/8 in) |
| 8.5m - 13 m |
4 mm (5/32 in) |
| over 13 m (43 ft) |
5 mm (3/16 in) |
|
| 3.14.7 |
Pulpits, Stanchions, Lifelines
- Limitations on Materials |
| |
TABLE 9 |
| |
| Earliest of Age or Series
Date |
detail |
| before 1/87 |
carbon fibre is not
recommended in stanchions pulpits and lifelines. |
| 1/87 and after |
stanchions, pulpits and
lifelines shall not be made of carbon fibre. |
|
| 3.17 |
Toe Rail or Foot - Stop |
| 3.17.1 |
A toe rail of minimum height 25
mm (1 in) shall be permanently installed around the foredeck
from abreast the mast, except in way of fittings and not further
inboard from the edge of the working deck than one third of the
local half-beam. |
| 3.17.2 |
The following variations shall
apply:- |
| |
TABLE 10 |
| |
| LOA |
Earliest of Age or Series
Date |
minimum requirements |
| any |
before 1/81 |
a toe rail minimum height
of 20 mm (3/4 in) is acceptable. |
| any |
before 1/93 |
an additional lifeline of
minimum height 25 mm (1 in) and maximum height 50 mm (2
in) is acceptable in lieu of a toe rail (but shall not
count as an intermediate lifeline). |
| any |
1/94 and after |
the toe rail shall be
fitted as close as practicable to the vertical axis of
stanchion bases but not further inboard than 1/3 the
local half-beam. |
|
| 3.18 |
Toilet |
| 3.18.1 |
A toilet, permanently installed |
| 3.19 |
Bunks |
| 3.19.2 |
Bunks, permanently installed |
| 3.20 |
Cooking Facilities |
| 3.20.1 |
A cooking stove, permanently
installed or securely fastened with safe accessible fuel shutoff
control and capable of being safely operated in a seaway. |
| 3.21 |
Drinking Water Tanks &
Drinking Water |
| 3.21.1 |
Drinking Water Tanks |
| |
| a) |
A yacht shall have a
permanently installed delivery pump and water tank(s): |
|
| 3.21.3 |
Emergency Drinking Water |
| |
| a) |
At least
9 litres (2 UK gallons, 2.4 US gallons) of drinking
water for emergency use shall be provided in a dedicated
and sealed container or container(s) |
|
| 3.22 |
Hand Holds |
| |
Adequate hand holds shall be
fitted below deck so that crew members may move about safely at
sea. |
| |
A hand hold should be capable
of withstanding without rupture a side force of 1500N -
attention is drawn to ISO 15085. |
| 3.23 |
Bilge Pumps and Buckets |
| 3.23.1 |
No bilge pump may discharge into
a cockpit unless that cockpit opens aft to the sea. |
| 3.23.2 |
Bilge pumps shall not be
connected to cockpit drains. (OSR 3.09) |
| 3.23.3 |
Bilge pumps and strum boxes shall
be readily accessible for maintenance and for clearing out
debris |
| 3.23.4 |
Unless permanently installed,
each bilge pump handle shall be provided with a lanyard or catch
or similar device to prevent accidental loss |
| 3.23.5 |
The following shall be provided: |
| |
| a) |
two permanently installed
manual bilge pumps, one operable from above, the other
from below deck. Each pump shall be operable with all
cockpit seats, hatches and companionways shut and shall
have permanently installed discharge pipe(s) of
sufficient capacity to accommodate simultaneously both
pumps |
|
| |
| f) |
two buckets of stout
construction each with at least 9 litres (2 UK gallons,
2.4 US gallons) capacity. Each bucket to have a lanyard. |
|
| 3.24 |
Compass |
| 3.24.1 |
The following shall be provided:- |
| |
| a) |
a marine magnetic
compass, independent of any power supply, permanently
installed and correctly adjusted with deviation card,
and |
|
| |
| b) |
a compass which may be
hand-held |
|
| 3.25 |
Halyards. |
| |
No mast shall have less than two
halyards, each capable of hoisting a sail. |
| |
Boom Support. US SAILING
prescribes that some means must exist to prevent the boom from
dropping if support from the mainsail and/or halyard fails.
Topping lifts or supporting vangs are acceptable for this
purpose. |
| 3.27 |
Navigation Lights (see OSR
2.03.3) |
| 3.27.1 |
Navigation lights shall be
mounted so that they will not be masked by sails or the heeling
of the yacht. |
| 3.27.2 |
Navigation lights shall not be
mounted below deck level and should be at no less height than
immediately under the upper lifeline. |
| 3.27.3 |
Navigation light intensity |
| |
TABLE 11 |
| |
| LOA |
Guide to required
minimum power rating for an electric bulb in a
navigation light |
| under 12 m (39.4 ft) |
10 W |
| 12 m (39.4 ft) and
above |
25 W |
|
| |
US SAILING prescribes that
in the US compliance with the recommendations of COLREGS shall
suffice in satisfying these regulation, COLREGS requirements are
as follows; |
| |
TABLE 14 |
| |
| LOA |
Light |
Luminous Intensity |
Minimum Range |
| |
|
|
of visibility |
| under 39.4 ft |
Side |
0.9 candelas |
1 mile |
| |
Stern |
4.3 candelas |
2 miles |
| 39.4 ft and above |
Side |
4.3 candelas |
2 miles |
| and less than 164 ft |
Stern |
4.3 candelas |
2 miles |
|
| 3.27.4 |
Reserve navigation lights shall
be carried having the same minimum specifications as the
navigation lights above, with a separable power source, and
wiring or supply system essentially separate from that used for
the normal navigation lights |
| 3.27.5 |
spare bulbs for navigation lights
shall be carried, or for lights not dependent on bulbs,
appropriate spares. |
| 3.28 |
Engines, Generators, Fuel |
| 3.28.1 |
A securely covered inboard
propulsion engine shall be provided together with permanently
installed exhaust and fuel supply systems and fuel tank(s) |
| 3.28.2 |
A propulsion engine shall be
provided, EITHER as a securely covered inboard engine together
with permanently installed exhaust and fuel supply systems and
fuel tank(s) OR in a multihull of less than 12.0m (39.4ft) as an
outboard engine with associated tanks and fuel supply systems,
all securely fastened. |
| |
| a) |
A separate generator for
electricity is optional. However, when a separate
generator is carried it shall be permanently installed,
securely covered, and shall have permanently installed
exhaust and fuel supply systems and fuel tank(s). A
separate generator shall comply with OSR 3.28.3 (c) and
(e) |
|
| 3.28.3 |
A propulsion engine required by
Special Regulations shall:- |
| |
| a) |
provide a minimum speed
in knots of (1.8 x square root of LWL in metres) or
(square root of LWL in feet) |
|
| |
| b) |
have a minimum amount of
fuel which may be specified in the Notice of Race but if
not, shall be sufficient to be able to meet charging
requirements for the duration of the race and to motor
at the above minimum speed for at least 8 hours |
|
| |
| c) |
have adequate protection
from the effects of heavy weather |
|
| |
| d) |
when an electric starter
is the only method for starting the engine, have a
separate battery, the primary purpose of which is to
start the engine |
|
| |
| e) |
have each fuel tank
provided with a shutoff valve. Except for permanently
installed linings or liners, a flexible tank is not
permitted as a fuel tank. |
|
| 3.28.4 |
Batteries |
| |
| b) |
It is recommended that
consideration be given to the installation of sealed
batteries, noting however that a special charging device
may be specified by the battery manufacturers |
|
| 3.29 |
Communications
Equipment, EPFS (Electronic Position-Fixing System), Radar, AIS |
| |
Provision of
GMDSS and DSC is unlikely to be mandatory for small craft during
the term of the present Special Regulations However it is
recommended that persons in charge include these facilities when
installing new equipment. |
| 3.29.1 |
The following shall be provided: |
| |
| a) |
A marine radio
transceiver (or if stated in the Notice of Race, an
installed satcom terminal), and |
|
| |
| |
i |
an emergency antenna when
the regular antenna depends upon the mast. |
|
| |
| b) |
When the marine radio
transceiver is VHF: |
|
| |
| |
i |
it shall have a rated
output power of 25W |
|
| |
| |
ii |
it shall have a masthead
antenna, and co-axial feeder cable with not more than
40% power loss |
|
| |
| |
iii |
the following types
and lengths of co-axial feeder cable will meet the
requirements of OSR 3.29.1 (b)(ii): (a) up to 15m (50ft)
- type RG8X ("mini 8"); (b) 15-28m (50-90ft) -
type RG8U; (c) 28-43m (90-140ft) - type 9913F (uses
conventional connectors, available from US supplier
Belden); (d) 43-70m) 140-230ft - type LMR600 (uses
special connectors, available from US supplier Times
Microwave). |
|
| |
| |
iv |
it should include
channel 72 (an international ship-ship channel which, by
common use, has become widely accepted as primary choice
for ocean racing yachts anywhere in the world) |
|
| |
| f) |
Independent of a main
radio transceiver, a radio receiver capable of receiving
weather bulletins |
|
| |
| i) |
An EPFS (Electronic
Position-Fixing System) (e.g. GPS) |
|
| 4.29.2 |
Yachts are reminded that no
reflector, active or passive, is a guarantee of detection or
tracking by a vessel using radar. |
| |
| a) |
The
attention of persons in charge is drawn to legislation
in force or imminent affecting the territorial seas of
some countries in which the carriage of an AIS set is or
will be mandatory for certain vessels including
relatively small craft. |
|