IOM History (AMYA MY #177)

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[Ed:  A number of comments inserted in 2023 to the original article of summer 2014.]

A Brief History of the IOM Class

by Lester Gilbert

 

To hear Jan Dejmo (SWE) talk, it seems he enjoyed sailing Marbleheads in the 1970’s and 80’s, and then decided to see what he could do to improve the situation of radio sailing.  It may be because Jan [was] an architect by profession, but he [had] a rare gift of seeing the big picture, and then an equally rare gift of not letting go until he [had] achieved whatever objectives he [decided were] important in improving the big picture.  Jan [was] an exceptional friend of radio sailing for many years, alongside his long involvement in full-size boat administration with IYRU and ISAF.  He chaired the working party which produced the Equipment Rules of Sailing (ERS), being a very significant change to the Racing Rules of Sailing, and which developed the ISAF standard class rules format.

 

Jan joined the IYRU-MYRD (International Yacht Racing Union – Model Yacht Racing Division, as IRSA was known at that time) as Chairman of the Technical Committee, and saw the need for a radio sailing class of boat that had complete and wide-spread international support.  Graham Bantock (GBR) followed Jan as IYRU-MYRD Technical Committee Chairman when Jan became Vice-Chairman of MYRD in 1994. Together they developed and in 1988 launched the class rules for the International One Metre we know today.

 

There was one over-riding factor which determined the shape of the original IOM rules: the boat was to be significantly lower in cost than a Marblehead.  So the rules prevented exotic materials, limited hull design and rig choices, and sought to ensure the boat could be successfully built by a non-professional builder.  Amongst many benefits, this also provided a boat that was much easier to transport for international events.  Of the ten or so major design parameters, the rules left only one of those parameters free, and restricted the remaining nine, as follows:

 

Parameter

Restriction

Hull type

Mono-hull

Sail area

No.1 rig approx. 0.6 m2

Rig choices

3 rigs only, one-design

Draft

420 mm max

Ballast ratio

62.5% max (2500 g bulb max)

Hull length

1000 mm

Displacement

4000 g minimum

Rig plan

Bermuda sloop, 7/8 fractional rig, No.1 rig aspect ratio approx. 4.8

Radio control

Two channels

Beam

No restriction

 

A competitive IOM can be built by an averagely competent model yacht builder on his kitchen table, since the weight limits and materials limits make home building quite feasible.  And, a competitive boat remains competitive for several years.  This provides very considerable benefits of reduced life-time costs and maintained resale values.  There are other, more minor, design and build parameters which the class rules also leave open – fin and rudder planforms, longitudinal rig and foil placements, and hull rocker profile, for example – and it is these freedoms and characteristics which have made the class hugely popular and kept it “fresh” for over 25 years.

 

One serious mistake was made right at the beginning: fins were allowed to be unrestricted as to materials and dimensions.  Blessed with perfect hindsight, we now know that a competitive IOM must have a thin fin which inevitably means a fin made of carbon fibre.  Such a fin cannot be easily built on the kitchen table, and has to be bought from a professional builder.  This mistake was recognized in around 1994, and there were proposals to limit the fin to a minimum of 10 mm thickness or 10% of chord.  Although these proposals found favour with owners, they were defeated – there were too many with a vested interest who already had expensive carbon fins.

 

Since 1988, due to the popularity of the class, the small winning margins of well-sailed boats, and intense competition at World, continental, and national championships, there have been numerous rule interpretations and rule changes every few years.  While each change generates some heated debate, the intention was always to keep the boats in the class the same as possible within the spirit of the rules, and none of the changes have been true “game changers” – the class has retained a remarkably stable rules base.

 

Currently [2013], the class has 26 National Class Associations (NCAs) affiliated to the International Class Association (IOMICA), though there are undoubtedly IOMs sailing in more than these 26 countries.  The latest count of declared numbers is as follows:

 

IOMs 2013
(from IOMICA Web site)

IOMs 1994
(IMYRU)

Country

Registered

Certificated

Declared

ARG

64

49

 

AUS

486

482

100

BAR

16

16

 

BEL

28

28

 

BRA

91

62

50

CAN

108

80

7

CHI

70

35

 

CRO

62

62

10

DEN

51

42

5

ESP

136

68

 

FIN

 

 

 

FRA

148

148

80

GBR

1342

1094

600

GER

232

228

40

IRL

61

61

 

ISR

15

15

 

ITA

87

64

 

MLT

13

11

10

NED

24

24

 

NOR

 

 

 

NZL

159

146

200

POR

63

56

15

RSA

60

60

 

SUI

28

15

 

SWE

154

102

 

TUR

30

12

 

USA

527

284

 

Total

4055

3244

1017

 

A very large number of IOM designs have been produced, and this is a (necessarily incomplete and) partial list of 34 of those which have been seen at international competitions [up to 2013]: 2 Dogs, 3 Dogs, Ace, Arrival, Britpop, Cheinz, Cockatoo, Fraktal, Gadget, Ikon, Isis, Italiko, Kantun, Kite, Lintel, Mad Max, Metric Magick, Obsession, Oscar, Pikanto, Psycho, Rage, Robot, Scharmer, Stealth, Tinto/Red Wine, Tonic, Topiko, Trinity, TS2, V8, Vektor, Widget, Zig Zag.

 

It is mainly the unrestricted beam which has driven IOM design development.  Early IOMs had moderate beams, around 180 mm at the waterline (WL), following the practice of their time.  Then Gary Cameron (AUS) and Craig Smith (AUS) found the benefits of wider beam with the TS2, and a number of designs followed with WL beams of around 190 or 200 mm and visually-imposing maximum deck-level beams up to 300 mm.  Beam progressively moderated for later designs, probably because wide beam designs were slower in other than top-of-rig conditions, and possibly because wide-beam designs made it more difficult to keep a well-balanced helm as wind varied during an event.  Recently, narrow beam boats have dominated, led by the success of Brad Gibson’s (AUS) Britpop with approximately 160 mm WL beam, 170 mm at deck level.

 

Acknowledgements

Some of the material for this article has been drawn from documents originally authored by Jan Dejmo (SWE), Graham Bantock (GBR), Laurent Chapelot (FRA), and Robert Grubisa (CRO).  None of these documents are easily found in the public domain.  The article has been improved by comments made by Graham Bantock and Bob Wells (USA).

 


©2024 Lester Gilbert