I'm also busting with pride today... my tactician on our 36.7 is sailing his boat in the J/24 WORLDS this week, and they won a race today. A huge accomplishment. Go the Motorhome!!!
We also have a couple of boats in the J-24 Worlds this year. Carter & Molly (SeaBagsJ24) won race 3 and had a 7th in race 7, otherwise in the top 25% most races...
PHRF:
While I enjoy a boat that has a turn of speed it was not our only choice when choosing a boat but rather
part of the equation..
CS-36 - 123
Catalina 34 - 147
Catalina 36 - 144
Ericson 35-3 - 128
Hunter 36 - 150
Morris 36 - 156
Niagra 35 - 171
Pearson 36 - 141
Pearson 36-2 - 126
Pearson 365 - 228
Sabre 36 - 120
Beneteau 361 - 135
Bristol 35.5 - 153
C&C Landfall 35 - 156
C&C Landfall 38 - 138
CAL 35-2 - 138
Cape Dory 36 - 174
Our CS-36 does just fine in the class of boats we would have considered buying but I do not by any means consider her "quick". I do consider her a "tank", hell she weighs 4K + more than our Catalina 36 (using the same scale) and our Catalina 36 was a much larger boat inside and pretty heavy for a fin 36.
To us the lack of creaks and groans when beating up wind in 35 knots, & the build quality, meant more than a slightly faster boat that sacrificed build quality or cut certain corners during construction..
The only boats on the list above I would compare our boat to, build quality wise, would be the Niagara 35 (barely), Cape Dory 36, Bristol 35.5 and the Morris 36.. Of those boats that would be on our list she is
technically the fastest. Of course speed for us was only part of the equation... That said we also owned a Catalina 36 that I personally feel was nearly as fast as our CS-36.. On the other side the Ericson 35-3 I consider a faster boat which accelerates significantly faster out of tacks than our CS-36 does yet they both have nearly identical ratings. I raced on a E 35-3 and a E 34 for a few years and they are great 80's
performance cruisers..
Other things also matter to us like how the boat tracks, how she balances, how she sails down wind, how she can drive through a sea and retain momentum. The difference in how our Catalina 36 and CS-36 do these things is as dramatic as night and day but those things are rarely accounted for in handicap ratings.... Hull slap/noise at anchor is another one folks often ignore. I have one boat I work on where the owner has given up cruising because the hull slap is so obnoxious he and his wife can't sleep.. This is one area that is rarely if ever talked about. It is one thing for a stripped out Sydney 38 to be noisy on a mooring or at anchor (almost deafening) but a boat billed as a "cruiser/racer" with full cruising amenities and beautiful cherry interior is another story. Yep she's fast but when
you have not slept because of
hull slap how will
you perform sailing her...??
IMHO PHRF ratings should always be a
consideration when looking at boats but there is a lot more to buying a boat than a good PHRF rating, unless all you do is PHRF....
Course if I really want to
race it is one design.. If I want to
beer can it is PHRF.. I
enjoy PHRF more than one design for the
fun aspect but prefer one design for the
competitiveness....