The Class
Class Websites
Other Byte Fleets & Sites
International Events
Weather & Conditions
NoteThe following links give you data in real-time, but some browsers take shortcuts and don't really refresh the page. If the information you're getting is old, first close any windows or tabs displaying the forecast, then clear your browser's cache and try again.
Forecasts
Local Conditions in Real-Time
Rules
Straight from the source.
Very well-executed series of online quizzes that present you with a Flash-animated race situation where you pretend to be the jury. Access to answers requires you to submit an email address but is otherwise free. (Occasional newsletters from the loft are well-designed and informative; privacy is maintained.)
North Sails in conjunction with US Sailing hosts a circuit of all-day seminars, one of which focuses on rules. Not exactly cheap, but taught by real experts.
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Document LibraryDocuments referenced on our site should link directly to a downloadable copy, but we store them together with a handful of PDFs related to the fleet, events, the class, the boat, etc. in the Pages section of our Google Group. If you have trouble accessing them, email the fleet webmaster at sfbytes@gmail.com.
Local Resources
Yacht Clubs
- Richmond YC — the epicenter of San Francisco Byte sailing, and a lot Northern California dinghy racing, too. Superb facilities.
- Encinal YC — hosts small-boat racing year-round in the Oakland Estuary
- Gold Country YC — hosts an incredibly fun “Go for the Gold Regatta” at Scotts Flat Lake in California Gold Country
- Fresno YC — hosts the annual summer High Sierra Regatta amid the exquisite alpine beauty of Huntington Lake, between Yosemite and King's Canyon National Parks
Media
- Latitude 38 — a staple of sailing culture in the Bay; publishes monthly on paper, several times a week in pixels
- norcalsailing.com — great Bay Area resource for multimedia, news, race reports, and more
Gear
The Builder
PS2000 — You can email or phone them for anything and everything Byte-related. Friendly, dedicated, and incredibly helpful staff.
Local Dealer
Contact Glenn Hansen of Hansen Rigging.
Sail Repair
When sticky-back is not enough… Try Pineapple Sails in Alameda. Kame Richards will treat you with the same patience, interest, and professional respect as if you had dragged in a TP52 main.
iPhone Goodies
- AyeTides (or here at the App Store) — tide predictions derived from the highly-repected XTide source code. Note that there are several tide apps for the iPhone; unlike most (if not all) of the others, this one is self-contained and does not require an active network connection to work.
- iNavX (or here at the App Store) — yes, your real-time position—generated from any of the iPhone's 3 sources (GPS, cell-tower triangulation, or Wifi)—scrolls along on the real NOAA-produced raster charts in full color. On your frickin' phone! Amazing. From the shop that makes the best marine navigation software for Macs. If you're crazy enough to bring your iPhone on your Byte, you might consider an Aquapac for it. Just a thought…
Some Places to Buy Stuff
DisclaimerThe links below are to services that fleet members have found useful and worth returning to. It is meant to be helpful, not comprehensive, and the fleet maintains no commercial relationships with any of them.
- Annapolis Performance Sailing — A chandlery like no other. If your nearest West Marine doesn't have what you want, try them. Whatever they don't have they can get. Usually quickly. They eliminated their Byte parts section, but almost everything on the boat is a stock part. (Things cost more on their Byte page than they did in the regular stock section of their catalog anyway…)
- Svendsen's Boat Works — Try them before APS if you live in the East Bay; you might avoid shipping fees. Whatever they don't have they can probably get. Not always quickly.
- Home Depot — Next time you lose your $40+ gloves buy a $4 pair of work gloves with latex or nitrile (if you're allergic) on the palms and fingers. Snip the thumb and whichever fingers you want. You'll be surprised.
- West Coast Sailing — A Portland operaton. Lots of stuff. Helpful staff.
- Zhik — Really good hiking gear. Trendy, too. But their self-proclaimed “famous revolution in sailing gloves” is nonsense: see “Home Depot” above.
- Queensport — Australian outfit famous for their hikers. Several in our fleet have ordered their gear from them because of their ability to fine-tune fit. Good, good stuff.
- Rooster Sailing — U.K. maker of excellent hikers and other water wear; they should probably get more attention here. Believe it or not, you can learn an awful lot about technical clothing in their video library.
- Murray's Watersports — Lots of the usual stuff you can get elsewhere, and one thing you can't: Barz Optics, made in Australia for waterrats everywhere. A godsend for those helpless without glasses, and helpful for anyone getting firehosed in the face while shredding on a reach in 20+.
- Helm of Sun Valley — San Mateo ski and windsurf shop good for one thing and one thing only: batten tuners. If you lose that widget that slips over the leech end of a batten, visit them. $5 each. Ask them to dig them out of their windsurfing stock.
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