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Capt. Mooron wrote:
I'l try it again as well... I might get it to work on a reach if I continuously adjust and trim the sails.... I'm not holding my breath. Has anyone else managed to sail upwing with a rudder swinging free for more than what would constitute normal momentum over a short period.??? The navigator© wrote: Yes but it requires a flat sea. Not really, but if there is a sea running then it requires both skill & patience. Can you say "dynamic equilibrium"? C'mon, say it with me now. It's really just a fancy word for saying that the boat will swing one way, then the other, but will be able to be steered on a course averaging between the swings. The trickiest part is to keep the boat close to the wind without getting thrown through stays by some combination of gust & wave; or if the circumstances are such that this is going to happen anyway, to coax the boat back onto the desired course. I'm having a hard time imagining circumstances where one could not at least immobilize the rudder, much less rig some type of emergency steering. In one Bermuda Race a few years ago, one boat that lost it's rudder used a bunk lashed to the spinnaker pole as an emergency rudder & tiller. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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