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oups.com... The cunningham is esentially a rule cheater. It provides a way to increase luff tension without pulling the sail outside the black bands. "Capt. JG" wrote: I guess if we're talking about racing... Or a sail that is cut so it has no room to increase luff tension- for example, if the head is at full hoist and the gooseneck is fixed. Luff tension is luff tension. If you can't get it by pulling the top tighter, then you have to pull the bottom... and if the bottom is fixed, then you need a cunningham. BTW a lot of new sails are made with the tack free to float up & down as tension is adjusted.... not fixed to the gooseneck. BTW 2 if you have a sail that need the cunningham pulled on in light air, then that sail is blown (or the luff boltrope has shrunk). How about boom brake or jibe-preventer? :-) I'd consider that a "control line" but don't like them and have never used them on a boat I was skippering. If you can't avoid gybing, or keep control of the boom when gybing, then you need practice on the helm & sheet! OTOH for a long cruise with a windvane or autopilot, they are useful but in the way. They work great for any reasonable length of time... I wouldn't bother for just a few minutes, but the preventer is easy to rig and unrig, and is worth it in shifting wind. So is PAYING ATTENTION I agree that paying attention is the most important factor, but on downwind runs of an hour or so, a small mistake can translate into a big problem. The preventer is perfect for that. This is especially true when inexperienced people are at the helm, which is fairly routine if I'm teaching. I've known of two incidents where boats got in big trouble with a preventer rigged. One ended up gybing anyway, turning about 120 degrees and getting stuffed when the main went aback; the other narrowly missed getting run down by a large tow as the skipper tried to direct the crew how to unrig the preventer quickly so he could turn. Both cases were of course caused by inattention, not the preventer. But the preventer doesn't do anything a good helmsman can't do. I've seen this happen also... or similar anyway, but a preventer does do something even a good helmsman can't do... not require 100% focus for several days or hours. Even an excellent helmsman needs a pee break from time to time. The times I've sailed other people's boats with preventers rigged, it always seemed more in the way than helpful. DSK I would qualify that by saying "many times" instead of always. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
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