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Bart Senior wrote:
Steering well takes practice. It also takes good self discipline, or possibly a Zen approach, as *not* steering is faster! This is what Ozzy meant by being a "tiller wiggler." ... I agree with you 100% about pointing too high. Most people pinch. It is frustrating to me to see it and point it out, and then be ignored while the competition walks over us. The smartest thing a helmsman can do is listen to his crew when they tell him he is pinching. Well, the crew should be doing something else besides watching the telltales. But pinching is not good. A few months ago I was invited to race on a Beneteau F347 and ended up helming at the start. I was pinching the boat too much, and let a number of smaller & theoretically slower boats drive out from under us. Frustrating. We got it all back though. It was a heavy air race... lots of fun. Also it is common for other boats to point higher when someone else is watching. The idea being--point high when someone is watching, and get them to pinch and slow down. Crew will report when someone is pointing higher than you, and that reinforces the pinching syndrome. The helmsman freaks out, points higher, and slows the boat down. Another issue is that boats often *look* like their pointing higher than they are. The ideal course on a beat is to scallop very slightly, footing and then pinching. This does a couple of things... if you time it right, it gets you best VMG through wind shifts too small to tack on; it puts you in phase with waves & groups of waves, it ensures that you don't miss any lifts. It also helps you shake off any cover or bury anybody that you are covering if they're trying to get out of phase with you. ***** I've also seen one minor change in rigging make a significant improvement in boat speed. Which is why I posed this question. The one that comes to mind is headstay or forestay length. Sure. Mast rake is very important, and as you said, increasing it will help upwind speed but hurt downwind. Adding one inch on an Express 37 I crewed on moved us up the fleet from the bottom third to top half overnight. We've talked about this in past discussions. Ken Read made a change like this to help him with his impressive series in last years Etchells worlds. Sometimes there are breakthroughs in tuning... like when a Brazilian team won the Lightning Worlds with a mast that was not raked at all... made their jib look very funny. Their pointing was good but they won by downwind speed. Now rigs are getting raked more again.... fads come & go! Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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