I should have added "until the next forecast point", because after that, if the wind is different than expected, they will move. But you have 12 hours when they are rock solid. Blaise is bragging a bit, but let's remember LS's task what a little bit more complicated because the wind changed everywhere within a cell so the extrapolation was less precise to save on computer power.blzblz a écrit :No, they don't, why should they ?That's the main difference between LS and RG, RG's schedule points don't drift!!!
Thanks for the tip!Yes and no:Another difference is you can break heading within an iteration, that's handy so at a cell boundary, you set the new heading at the first minute after you enter the new cell.
Yes if next cell wind parameters are better, then setting a schedule point the minute just after you enter the next cell will speed you.
No if next cell wind parameters are less good: it's better to set a schedule point at the iteration minute after entering the new cell, then you'll sail in the new cell with the old one's wind parameters for a few minutes till the iteration