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Rodney Myrvaagnes
 
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On 21 Nov 2004 12:18:14 -0800, (Love a
Sheep) wrote:

I am learning to sail and have a few questions. I understand that the
sails can act either as an airofoil (lile an aircraft wing) or like a
parachute where the wind simply blows the sail directly. My question
is this. If the wind is ahead of the beam ie we are sailing windward
then I expect that the airofoil principle must always hold there
otherwise we would be sailing backwards!

However, if the wind is aft of the beam on say the starboard side then
surely we have a choice where to set the sails ie they can be on the
starboard side (ie the boom is pointing to the starboard side) where
they act as an airofoil or on the port side where they act as a
'parachute' - is this right or am I missing something. If so which is
best?

You are right. But it depends on the particular boat where exactly the
optimum switchover from drawing to stalled takes place.

If you have shrouds, the decision may be made by how much chafe you
are willing to tolerate between spreaders and main. With an unstayed
mast you have more freedom to experiment.



Rodney Myrvaagnes NYC

Let's Put the XXX back in Xmas