Welcome to Sail IQ! This section is designed to help you get the most out of our race analysis tools and to guide you through the core concepts and workflows.
Common Workflows (Coming Soon)
Step-by-step guides for everyday tasks such as trimming sessions, comparing boats, and setting up new events.
Interpreting Analysis
A detailed explanation of the charts and visualizations available in the system. Learn what Boxplots reveal about speed consistency, how to read Radial Analysis for wind-angle performance, and how to use the Slicer to isolate specific race segments.
Event
A top-level entity used to logically organize sailing data. An event can represent a multi-day regatta or a training block.
Series
A collection of races or training sessions that typically take place on the same day.
Boat
A boat added to the system so its performance can be tracked and analyzed.
Race
A single race added to the system for performance analysis. To analyze a race, you must define a course (set of marks) and the sequence in which those marks are passed.
Session
Continuous telemetry data captured during sailing. For example, if you start recording data on a device such as Vakaros at the beginning of sailing and stop when you finish, that recording is one session.
Session Bucket
A container for sessions. It groups sessions from one or more boats so they can be analyzed together.
Collect session data
Store session files from all event participants locally. At the moment, we support Vakaros, Sailmon, GPX, and Explorer file formats.
Create an Event
Give the event a clear name and date, for example: “A-Class World Championship 2025”.
Add boats to the Event
Add all boats that participated and for which session data is available. Use unique and descriptive boat names to make later analysis easier.
Create a Series
A Series groups races that typically occurred on the same day. Use recognizable names such as “Day 1” or “Day 2 – Afternoon”.
Add sessions to the Session Bucket
When a Series is created, a Session Bucket is created automatically. Add the relevant sessions (recorded data) from one or more boats.
Review and trim sessions
Inspect individual sessions to ensure they are correct and cover the relevant time span. Trim away data that is not relevant for race or training analysis.
Slice the Series into Races
Use Action → Slice Series into Races on the selected Series in the tree menu.
Press F to lock the vertical time indicator, then click + Start @ time or + End @ time to define race boundaries. Press F again to unlock the indicator.
After defining all starts and finishes, click Generate Races. The races will appear automatically in the tree menu.
Create the race course
Select a race and choose Action → Create Course.
Creating accurate courses is one of the most important steps, as all subsequent analysis depends on this data. When finished, click Generate Course.
If you are new to the system, we strongly recommend starting with the Interpreting Analysis guide. It explains the visual language of the application and helps you quickly identify opportunities for improvement.
The Sailing Visualization system provides several powerful tools for dissecting race performance. This section explains how to interpret the key analysis screens.
The Leg Analysis screen allows you to compare performance across different legs of the race using statistical summaries.
What it shows
Boxplots for key metrics such as SOG (Speed Over Ground), VMG (Velocity Made Good), Angle to Wind, and Heel.
How to read a boxplot
The whiskers show the range of the remaining data.
Why it matters
A boat with a higher median SOG but a tall box may be fast but inconsistent. A boat with a high median and a short box is both fast and consistent.
This screen helps you compare the efficiency and geometry of maneuvers such as tacks and jibes.
What it shows
Each maneuver is isolated and overlaid on a common chart, allowing you to compare boat tracks through the turn.
Key metrics
Time to Recover: The time required to return to full speed after the maneuver.
How to use it
The overlays reveal whether you are turning too wide (losing distance) or too tight (losing speed).
Radial Analysis visualizes performance relative to wind direction.
What it shows
A polar chart where the angle represents True Wind Angle (TWA) and the radius represents Speed (SOG or VMG).
How to interpret it
VMG chart: Highlights upwind and downwind efficiency, with lobes pointing toward 0° (upwind) and 180° (downwind). Larger lobes indicate better VMG.
Typical use case
Identify optimal sailing angles. For example, if your downwind VMG drops sharply at lower angles, the chart may reveal that you are sailing too deep.