C30 Racing
Anthony: let's face it, the C30 is no speedster. It doesn't point very well, its rather beamy, so start high off the starting line so that you can fall down to get speed. Don't over tighten your sails and don't position the traveler too high to mid ship. Pay attention to crew positioning. Install a sail stripe on the main sail, it allows you to see sail shape much better. Make sure you have a folding prop and clean the bottom every week. When tacking, try to get on to the new course asap, don't leave the rudder over too long. It combined with the skeg slow the boat down very fast. If you race, go in the spin class, the boat has a hugh spin sail--use it. Watch your knot meter, all the adjustments mean nothing unless the boat moves faster. Monitor all sail adjustments by the knot meter. If possible, adjust your knot meter to read in hundredths rather than tenths. If faster boats tend to cut you off, threaten to go wing to wing on them, when you put that wall of sail right behind them, they'll think twice next time. Some skippers have installed genoa tracks inside the life lines, some say it helps them point a little higher. Use sliding genoa cars so that you can adjust the sails constantly. When you get ready to tack, ease the genoa sheet a little, then fall off a little. This gives a bigger pocket in the sail and gives a little more power as you tack. I hate to reef, the boat is heavy and can take a lot of wind. Rather than reef, in heavy air keep someone on the traveler and since you're skipper, you'll see round ups sooner. Have them drop the traveler before you begin to round up. Hence you'll stay on course better and you won't lose speed nor direction.Use a Cunningham, a vang, the outhaul, and the backstay adjuster. Learn the local water, read up on water currents, ask local successful racing skippers why they positioned their boat where they did.