Hi Johnjohnw wrote:I can ship or unship "added weight" from within the bottom of a keel stepped mast. But I can't put the weight into the boat as a "corrector weight" when I change rigs. Weights added to the hull must be there for the whole regatta.
Yup, IMHUO, that's it.
Don't know about that. A battery pack is an item of control equipment AFAICS, and there are (relatively straightforward) restrictions on changing it during an event. A battery pack combined with a lump of lead is something else for me, and I'm scratching my head. It seems clear that the added lead is ballast of some sort. I'd think it was moveable ballast, and E4.7 makes strong restrictions on shipping and unshipping moveable ballast during an event -- you can't.On my other topic, I think we agree that my battery pack adheres to both the letter and intent of the rule in question.
Don't see why not. If it is an interesting question, let's explore it. No need to rule anything "out of court"...Your comment about the weight in the balloon/battery pack not being "control equiptment" leads to more questions that I don't think we need to or want to address.
I don't know of any rules which explicitly address these matters.Is there a definition of "control equiptment"?
Is there a definition of what constitutes a "battery pack"?
Is there a rule that specifies the makeup of a pack?
Or that an owner cannot use a custom pack?
Or that an owner cannot customize a pack to achieve a specific weight?
Good question. We know that a battery pack is pretty heavy and, let's imagine, contains a lot of lead. A pack also has additional materials which make it a "pack" -- binding, solder, straps, wire, connector, and so on. But a lump of inert lead added to a "pack" doesn't become part of the pack, surely, until it has some "battery pack" type function. Maybe, if instead of heat-shrink plastic wrapping keeping the cells together, you had some lead sheeting doing the job. Hmmm...At what point does the weight become an integrated part of the pack?