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RULES OF THE ASSOCIATION
(updated Jan 5th 2012 and
reflective of those agreed at the 2012 AGM)
1. Name and objective
1.1 The name of the Association is the 'Offshore
Model Racing Association' and the insignia of the Association shall
be the motif on all officially published material and the
association website.
1.2 The object for which the Association is formed is to promote and
facilitate the affairs of the Association generally. To stimulate
the design and construction of Offshore Model Power Boats within the
class rules, and to encourage the running, racing and development of
Offshore Model Power Boats.
2. Membership
2.1 All current members are to have a vote in the
affairs of the Association at the Annual General Meeting.
2.2 The Association on the recommendation of the committee may in
the general meeting elect honorary members.
2.3 On applying to join and/or renew membership to the Association,
all individuals undertake to comply with the rules as published. Any
recognised refusal or neglect to comply with the rules, any attempt
to subvert the rules, or any conduct which is deemed either unworthy
or injurious to the aims, objectives, interests and/or well-being of
the Association, its members and assets, will render the membership
of the individual in question, liable to termination or refusal.
In this eventuality, the individual will be asked to voluntarily
resign membership. If resignation of membership is refused or it is
otherwise deemed necessary, the elected committee can, on behalf of
the Association, terminate the membership in question forthwith.
Members who volunteer to resign their membership when requested to
do so, may re-apply for membership to the Association again in the
following year, at the discretion of the incumbent Committee.
An individual who has had membership compulsorily terminated will be
refused any re-application to the Association for a period no less
than 3 years from the end of the year of expulsion. After this
period, any re-application for membership will only be considered at
the discretion of the incumbent Committee.
The Association reserves the right to refuse membership, without
explanation, at all times.
2.4 There shall be a subscription fee payable on joining and
annually on or before the 31st. December. The fees shall be proposed
by the committee and voted on by those members at the Annual General
Meeting. Any existing member who has not re-joined by the 31st
January will have to pay their full membership fee plus the joining
fee.
2.5 A junior member shall be one who is 16 or younger in the
calendar year of membership. Likewise, a senior citizen shall be one
who is 65 or over in that calendar year of membership.
3. Officers
3.1 The Officers of the Association shall consist of a Chairman, an
Honorary Secretary and Honorary Treasurer who shall be elected at
the Annual General Meeting. The retiring officers shall be eligible
for re-election.
3.2 No candidate for election to any Office (other than retiring
officers) shall be proposed unless the name of such candidate and
his proposer shall have been sent to the Honorary Secretary two
weeks before the Annual General Meeting.
3.3 A Child Protection officer shall be elected in compliance with
current legal requirements. The CPO shall be CRB checked and will
ensure that the requirements of the OMRA Child Protection Policy are
met.
4. Committee
4.1 The committee shall consist of three officers
elected at the Annual General Meeting to hold office until the
conclusion of the next Annual General Meeting.
4.2 The Officers of the committee will in no way be personally
responsible for the deeds of the Association's members or any
financial actions taken against them. Members are responsible for
their own conduct at all times.
4.3 Candidates for election of the committee shall be those members
of the retiring committee who shall offer themselves for re-election
and such other members of the Association whose nominations duly
proposed and seconded by a member of the Association in writing
shall have been sent to the Honorary Secretary 14 days before the
Annual General Meeting.
4.4 If a casual vacancy occurs by death or resignation the Committee
may co-opt a member to fill the vacancy.
4.5 If the number of candidates duly proposed and seconded exceeds
the number of vacancies to be filled the election shall be by
ballot.
4.6 The committee shall manage the affairs of the Association
according to the rules and shall apply the funds of the Association
to the objectives of the Association.
4.7 It shall be the responsibility of the Honorary Treasurer to keep
a complete and accurate account of the Association's finances.
4.8 Membership fees for the committee shall be waived in the year of
office.
4.9 The committee may co-opt additional members onto the committee
as required to meet any future issues that may occur during the
office of the said committee.
5. Honorary Auditor
5.1 A member (other than an officer or committee
member) shall be appointed by the committee as Honorary Auditor
whose duties shall be to audit the accounts of the Association. In
the event that he/she is unwilling or unable to act, the committee
shall appoint a substitute.
6. General meetings
6.1 The Annual General Meeting shall be held at some
place on some day in the month of October/November to be "confirmed"
by the Chairman. The Honorary Secretary shall, at least 30 days
before the date of such a meeting, post, deliver electronically or
otherwise communicate to each member, notice thereof and of the
business to be brought forward thereat.
6.2 The committee may, on giving 30 days notice, call a general
meeting of the Association for any specific business, the nature of
which shall be stated in the summons convening the Meeting, wherever
possible.
6.3 The committee shall also call a general meeting on the
individual written request of twelve and a half percent of the
members, wherein the members in question must give good cause for
convening such a meeting.
6.4 At a general meeting of the Association each current member
(other than an honorary member) shall have one vote; honorary
members shall be entitled to attend the general meeting but shall
have no vote. In the case of an equality of votes the Chairman shall
have a second or casting vote.
7. New rules, Amendments and Alterations
7.1 Notice of any alterations or additions to the
rules intended to be proposed by a member of the Association shall
be given to the Secretary in writing 7 days before the Annual
General Meeting or at least 14 days before any special meeting at
which the same is to be brought forward and full particulars of any
such proposed alterations or additions shall be set out in the
notice given to the committee.
7.2 All such proposed alterations, additions and any amendments to
them which may be proposed, seconded and presented at the meeting,
shall be put to the vote of the meeting. Voting will be conducted on
a show of hands (or ballot if requested) and decided by a straight
majority of those present. (I.e. no postal or proxy votes)
8. Dissolution
8.1 Any assets will be divided amongst the paid up
members.
8.2 Any deficiencies will be borne equally by the paid up members.
9. Model Specification – General
9.1.1 Classes are designated by internal combustion
engine size and type of ignition system used. They are as follows: -
-Z Class 0 - 2.10cc (0.129 cu in) Non spark ignition
-AA Class 0 - 3.50cc (0.21 cu in) Non spark ignition
-A Class 3.51 - 7.50cc (0.46 cu in) Non spark ignition (All .46 size
engines are approved for this class)
-B Class 7.51 - 11.0cc (0.67 cu in) Non spark ignition
-C Class 11.01 - 50cc (3.05 cu in) Non spark ignition
-D Class 0 - 26cc (1.586 cu in) Spark ignition only
-E Class 0 - 50.8cc (3.099 cu in) Spark ignition only
Boats other than those using an internal combustion engine [glow or
petrol] are not eligible for OMRA championship classes.
9.1.2 Any mix of fuel is allowed in all classes.
9.2 Boat class plus OMRA membership number must be visible from both
sides of the boat. Numbers to be at least 2 inches or 50mm high.
i.e. ‘Member 24’s A’ class boat = A24, ‘B’ class boat B24 etc, NB:-
Z class only require their OMRA membership number. Membership
numbers are issued by the association and remain the property of the
association at all times.
9.3 A failsafe must be fitted to the throttle system and be in
working order at all times for all classes.
9.4 A form of grab handle must be fitted front and rear of all boats
and must be clear of exhausts, outdrives etc, In addition - On large
craft with an overall bow to stern length of 50 inches or more
excluding running gear, outrigger unit etc, a lanyard/painter must
be fitted (i.e. piece of rope or similar for towing a model.)
9.5 A scale driver or crew consisting of at least head and shoulders
must be fitted to all boats that have an open cockpit. Also they
must be painted to resemble their full size counterparts.
9.6 An internal exhaust system is to be fitted and may protrude up
to a maximum of 2.5 inches or 65mm past the stern of the boat
irrespective of shape, unless photographic evidence of the genuine
full size craft is provided in which case the hot area of the
exhaust must be covered.
9.7 Drive systems can be direct or geared, submerged or surface
drive.
9.8 Models to represent their full size offshore type counterparts
as much as possible.
9.9 Models must run in a complete state at all times i.e. with tops
fitted unless it has been irreparably damaged during the race.
9.10 Models must comply with the noise limit of 80db or less at 10
metres at all times. If a model fails to comply with the noise limit
it must leave the water immediately. It may be returned to the water
after any necessary adjustments to comply with the noise limit.
However, if it still fails to comply the model will be immediately
disqualified.
9.11 Models can only be operated in OMRA events on legal radio
frequencies.
9.12 All transmitters must have the proper manufactured end on the
tip of the aerial.
9.13 All boats (excluding 'specialised designs' such as Tunnel Hulls
and Ribs) must have at least 50mm (2 inches) of side height. "Side
height" in this case being the measurement of the maximum distance
between the chine rail and deck.
9.14 Boats designed with rounded or chamfered edges to the deck will
have their side height measured vertically from the chine line to a
point halfway round the curve or chamfer. Rounded decks are not
allowed to meet at the chine line directly unless it is a feature of
a model of a full size offshore race boat.
10. Model Specifications – Class Restrictions
Standard Z Class
10.1 The internal combustion engine must be a standard 0.12 cu in
but no engine price limit applies.=
10.2 No gearbox of any sort is allowed.
10.3 Drive to be submerged only. (Propeller situated under the hull
of the boat and not protruding past the point where the bottom of
the boat meets the transom).
10.4 Rudders may be mounted on the transom of the boat.
10.5 Tuned pipes may be used.
Modified Z Class
10.6 No engine price limit
10.7 Drive systems can be direct or geared, submerged or surface
drive.
D Class
As per E Class but with the following restrictions:
10.8 Engine limited to max swept volume of 26cc spark ignition,
petrol.
10.9 Internally standard, unmodified production
“off-the-shelf” engines up to 26cc from the following manufacturers
will be eligible: Zenoah, RCMK, RCCR-Pro, Sikk. (Modifications or
deviations from factory specification of the piston, cylinder block,
crankshaft, crankcase, conrod, and bearings are totally prohibited).
10.10 RTR Boats featuring engines conforming to Rule 10.9 such as
”Clone” Chinese copies of the above or similar are eligible, but
must comply with all OMRA general class regulations in section 9 and
feature a failsafe.
10.11 CMB, Quickdraw, J&G, M&D, B&H Hanson engines will NOT be
eligible as these are already deemed to be high performance engines.
10.12 Hull length is limited to a maximum length of 64”.
10.13 Any make of unmodified carburettor is permitted.
10.14 An exhaust pipe of tuned length may be used, providing it
complies with noise and safety regulations under section 9.
10.15 External “ancilliaries” to the engine may be substituted or
removed providing they have no known effect on enhancing the
performance of the engine. [A pull-start substituted for a pulley
start, by way of example]
10.16 Scrutineering of engines may take place on a random basis by a
person nominated by either the OOD or OMRA. Any members entering
boats run in this class found to be in deliberate breach of class
rules will have any and all D class championship points gained up
to that point removed, and will be disqualified from the D class
for the remainder of the season.
11. Races
11.1 OMRA rules will be upheld at all championship
events.
11.2 Only current members may operate in OMRA championships or other
approved OMRA events. Members may be called upon to produce their
membership card at any time.
11.3 At OMRA events all drivers must have a 'spotter' during racing
to inform them of any obstacles on the course, pass on information
and assist them with their boat or equipment etc,
11.4 A competitor may only enter and run one boat in each class.
11.5 A model may be run more than once in the same class only if
operated by a junior and their parent or guardian.
11.6 Two types of racing are to be used for championship events one
is chase boat and the other endurance.
11.7 During an OMRA event all participants have a personal
responsibility to ensure that Health and Safety issues are observed
and that where necessary any concerns are brought to the attention
of the Officer Of The Day.
12. Chase Boat event
12.1 Course to be a minimum of two miles in length.
12.2 Models to be individually timed, the maximum time limit for the
run to be set by the Officer Of The Day based on conditions of the
day.
12.3 Re-runs will only be permitted if the chase boat breaks down or
is too slow.
12.4 On-course restarts are permitted within the time limit unless
otherwise directed by the Officer Of The Day at the beginning of the
event.
Note: - Run finishes when model crosses the finish line or the time
limit has expired, which ever comes first
12.5 Competitors, spotters and rescue crew will wear lifejackets at
all times. The chase boat motor should have a ‘dead man’s handle’
fitted wherever possible.
12.6 DNF Scoring - Boats that gain a DNF after the
halfway/intermediate point as set by the OOD be given a level share
of Championship points from the remaining positions, after those
points have been apportioned to those boats who complete the course.
Those that DNF before the halfway point will be given a level share of Championship points from the
remaining positions, after points have been apportioned to those
boats who complete the course and those that complete more than half the
course. Points in all cases above 0.5 and above, will be
rounded up to a whole number and points split below 0.5 will be
rounded down to whole number points.
[Example: 3 boats in a class complete the course and 3 have DNF’s
but stop after the intermediate point. They each get a level
share of 4th 5th and 6th points (a total of 19 divided by 3 = 6.3)
and this is rounded down to 6 points each. The remaining DNF’s
before the half point (eg. 2) will each get a level share of 7th
and 8th points (a total of 7 points divided by 2 = 3.5 and rounded
up to 4).
13. Endurance Race Event
13.1 Course to be approximately 300 - 400 yards
around 3 to 4 marker buoys or as determined by the water available
and by the Officer Of The Day. This will be raced in a clockwise
direction.
13.2 Race duration is to be left up to the race organizer as long as
the total race time adds up to a minimum of 30 minutes or up to a
maximum of 60 minutes. Race organizers are encouraged to divide the
total race time into two separate heats per class when ever
possible.
13.3 A designated area next to the waters edge to be set up as the
pit area at all events. This is the only area in which a boat’s
engine may be started for the purpose of running in a heat ie: there
will be no carrying of boats with engines running outside this area.
13.4 Races may be started with a full course mill start or where the
location allows, a safe dead engine start.
- A mill start allows competitors to release their models onto the
water and proceed in a clockwise direction 2 minutes before the
start of the race. Models will then travel the full course during
this time with the aim of approaching the start line at the end of 2
minutes. Any cutting of the course during this stage will attract a
5 lap penalty.
- A dead engine start, as the name implies, requires that all
engines be stopped one minute before the start of the race. Then, at
the start signal, engines are started, models launched and racing
begins immediately.
13.5 A standard start will be used for the races by use of blasts
from an air horn. One blast for start of mill time, two blasts for
the start of the race and three blasts for the end of the race. At
any time, more than three blasts indicates danger and racing must
stop immediately.
13.6 A model will start to score laps from the first time it crosses
the start line after the start and must complete each time a full
circuit of the course to register laps. Any model jumping the start
will have to do another legal lap before being counted.
13.7 Models that fail to start or have stopped may join or rejoin
the race when safe to do so.
13.8 There will be rescue available during the course of the race
for any model that has stopped. The rescue boat will be manned by
two persons over the age of 16 years who must wear lifejackets when
in the boat. The wearing of hard hats is recommended but not
compulsory. The rescue boat has the right of way at all times and
all boats must visibly slow from racing speed when passing the
rescue boat. Failure to do so will incur penalties. There should be
a 'dead man's' handle fitted to outboard engines wherever possible.
13.9 Where practicable, the rescue boat is to be equipped with 2-way
radio in order to communicate with ODD or deputy on shore.
13.10 When the end of the race signal is sounded, the boats will
complete the lap they are on before returning to the pits in a safe
manner, cutting the course will draw a penalty.
13.11 The overall winner is the person who has the highest number of
laps in the combined heats. To reduce the possibility of a draw, the
finishing order of the boats is to be recorded. In the event of a
tie on laps at the end of the meeting, the position numbers for the
model from each of the heats are to be added together (the lowest
position total wins). In the event of two boats still being equal,
it is considered a draw. The count back score for non-finishers
equals the number of boats in the heat.
14. Driving infractions
14.1 The following rules are mandatory. Disregard of
them will be judged to be an infraction and will result in a
warning, lap deduction, heat or race penalties or disqualification.
14.2 All competitors are to race with due regard for safety at all
times.
14.3 Deliberate obstruction, zigzagging, or overtaking in such a way
that avoiding action has to be taken will draw a penalty.
14.4 The natural race lane is the lane that is nearest the course
line and is considered to approximately 1 metre wide.
This lane has the right of way at all times.
The right of way principle also applies at all turns.
Any boat wishing to overtake to occupy the race lane must establish
a minimum safe distance of three boat lengths in front of the boat
passed before gaining the right to that lane. Any boat going wide
forfeits its right to the race lane.
14.5 Penalties
Infractions of the above rules will normally incur penalties as
follows; -
Hitting the rescue boat at ANY time during the day - immediate
disqualification.
Cutting the course on mill start or end of race. - 5 lap deduction.
Driving infractions
- 1st offence a warning.
- 2nd offence 5 laps deduction.
- 3rd offence disqualification.
14.6 Any buoy missed during the race must be re-circled safely by
turning inside the course; otherwise the lap will not count. The
Officer Of The Day may advise drivers to miss buoys during the race
on the grounds of safety; there will be no penalty for this.
14.7 If a driver is disqualified he is to be advised as soon as
possible at which time he must be able to acknowledge the fact and
immediately remove his model from the water. Disqualification means
that the offending driver may take no further part in this class in
this event and that any lap or time score achieved so far is
disregarded. (The boat may still be run again by a non-offending
junior or guardian).
14.8 If, in the opinion of the rescue crew or the OOD, a model is
driven too close to the rescue boat or in a manner that endangers
them, then the OOD shall disqualify that driver and model
immediately. If the driver continues to drive in different classes
in a similar manner, then that driver can be banned for the whole
meeting.
14.9 If, during a heat, if a competitors’ boat hits a dead boat* at
full throttle without noticeably throttling back or taking evasive
action, a 5 lap penalty may be applied. [*This does not refer to
boats which have either spun or stopped immediately in front of the
boat which collides with it, but applies to boats which have been
dead in the water for a period].
15. Championship Scores
15.1 Championship points will be awarded at all
championship events to OMRA members only if championship legal i.e.
if models conform to the Model Specification.
15.2 Points are awarded as follows:-
1st-15
2nd-12
3rd-10
4th-8
5th-6
6th-5
7th-4
8th-3
9th-2
10th-1
15.3 Disqualification means no points are awarded.
15.4 The number of championship rounds/scores to count towards the
championship will be set at the Annual General Meeting proceeding
the championship season.
15.5 The following trophies to be awarded at all championship
events: -
- Fastest time/Highest laps of the day.
- Concourse d'elegance.
- 1st, 2nd, & 3rd. for each class.
15.6 In the event of a tie for 1st, 2nd or 3rd place in the
championship on points then the most number of 1st, 2nd or 3rd
places during the season are to be taken into consideration.
16. Perpetual Trophies
16.1 Award Titles - British Champion for each class.
-Champion Of Champions - best two class scores.
-1st. Lady Of OMRA - highest score in any class
-Best Junior - highest score in any class
-Concourse d'elegance - best finished boat
-Engineering - best engineered boat
-Max Coote Trophy - Best hull designer, Z class
16.2 Annual honours can only be gained by a model that has competed
in at least two championship events during the season.
16.3 Keepsake trophies will be awarded along with Championship
winners stickers that may be applied to the class winning members
boat during the following season.
16.4 All annual trophies are to be presented at the Annual General
Meeting.
16.5 Perpetual trophies are to be returned before or at the Annual
General Meeting.
Note: - any member winning a championship class on three consecutive
occasions will be awarded a special trophy to mark the achievement
(as from 2002).
17. OFFICER OF THE DAY
The following information is for guidance of The
Officer Of The Day at championship and non-championship events.
17.1 Hold a drivers meeting to clarify all rules before the start of
the event especially if any specific rules apply to the venue. It is
the competitor's responsibility to attend these meetings.
17.2 The Officer Of The Day has the final decision but guidance may
be sought from the committee members available.
17.3 The Officer Of The Day will have an OMRA rulebook available at
the event.
17.4 At all OMRA events it is the responsibility of the Officer Of
The Day or designated person to check that all boats comply with the
model specification. Any non-compliant boats may only be run at the
end of the day, time permitting, at the discretion of the OOD.
17.5 The Officer Of The Day is to post results on a notice board
when possible.
17.6 The Officer Of The Day is to ensure that lifejackets are worn
at all times in the rescue and chase boats. The wearing of hard hats
by the crew of the rescue boat is recommended but not compulsory.
17.7 Any members taking part in OMRA events may be called upon at
any time to assist the Officer Of The Day with the responsibilities
of running the event. It is the responsibility for the OOD to
appoint at least one assistant OOD or as many as preferred.
18. EVENT ORGANIZERS
18.1 Event organizers to submit their proposed dates
to the Secretary, prior to the AGM if possible. The committee will
plan for events to be 3 weeks apart when ever possible.
18.2 Under normal circumstances only one endurance race may be used
for a championship event at each venue per year. However, providing
that all venues submitted for championship racing in any given
season are taken up, a venue may be used for a championship
endurance race on more than one occasion as decided by the
committee. A chase boat event may be held on one or more occasions
as a championship event at the same venue per year
18.3 Accommodate all competitors at championship events by adjusting
the race duration, within the rules, accordingly. Choice of
frequency is on a ‘first come first served’ basis. No entries will
be accepted after 9pm two days before any event (i.e. Friday 9pm for
a Sunday event).
18.4 To advise the committee if they wish their event to be used as
a championship event. Championship events must be run to OMRA rules.
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