New ORC Rules and VPP ready for 2024 season
30 January 2024 – London, UK – The Offshore Racing Congress (ORC) is pleased to announce the new rules and regulations for this year’s 2024 season of racing are now available online at https://orc.org/organization/rules-regulations. These rules cover various topics related to fair handicap racing held among a broad range of boat types, from Sportboats to Superyachts to Multihulls.
The 2024 ORC Velocity Prediction Program (VPP) is also now ready and distributed to national rating offices around the world so they can start issuing 2024 ORC International and ORC Club certificates according to their local policies.
The 2024 VPP is also loaded into the ORC’s unique Sailor Services online portal for retrieving copies of any ORCi or ORC Club certificate issued in the last 15 years and using this data for running Test Certificates, generating ORC Speed Guide polars and producing Target Speed performance data for upwind and downwind VMG racing.
A summary of the changes to the rules based on approvals from the 2023 ORC Congress Annual Meeting is available here, and includes some notable improvements such as:
- Adding 24 knots to the True Wind Speed range of the ORC VPP
- Expanding allowed use of whisker poles
- Updates of depowering and force coefficients for Headsails set Flying
- Allowing Headsails set Flying to be flown in front of the forestay along with a spinnaker
- Removal of GPH from certificates in favor of APH
- Addition of a new Class 0 among the CDL limits defined for ORC Championship events
These are intended to be used primarily for ORC International and ORC Club certificates, but they can also be used by other handicapping systems that wish to adjust their performance analysis by secret or public formulae. The IMS follows the concept of the Universal Measurement System (UMS) and may be used by any rating system.
ORC Rating Rules include the limits and defaults for the hull, rig, sails and crew, the rules applying while racing, certificate layouts and descriptions of different ORC scoring options, with the flexibility to allow national variations in scoring preferences when desired.
ORC Multihull Rating Rules includes the limits and defaults for the hull, rig, sails and crew, the rules applying while racing, certificate layouts and description and a complete explanation of different ORCmh scoring options.
Besides its scientific background, the main principle of this rule is transparency. Copies of certificates are available at the ORCsy website, and each owner or representative has the ability to check the effects on their rating when changing any measurement value using the ORCsy Sailor Services web portal.
While the 2024 ORCsy and ORCmh rule books are finished and posted online, certificates for both systems will soon be ready for issue from ORC’s Central Rating Office.
According to the ORC Sportboat rules, three divisions are defined:
Division A for boats with DSPM/LSM03 of <3.70 and have only asymmetric spinnakers
Division B for boats with DSPM/LSM03 of <6.66 that have no trapezes, and
Division C for boats with DSPM/LSM03 of <6.66 and are equipped with trapezes.
ORC Championship Rules are also recommended for regional and national championships, and an ORC-standardized Notice of Race and Sailing Instructions may be used for any event at any level that uses ORC Rating system rules.
The ORC Green Book is available in its entirety or in separate parts to serve as templates for the Standard Notice of Race and Standard Sailing Instructions.
The ORC VPP Documentation will be updated for 2024 in due course, and the Hull Scanning Measurement Guide and ORC Speed Guide Explanation texts remain unchanged from previous editions.