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On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 18:33:45 GMT, Morgan Ohlson
wrote: On Mon, 11 Oct 2004 12:18:46 -0400, DSK wrote: You cannot bolt on "gofast." You can design & build a rig to be controllable & highly adjustable, and put on rigging to accomplish same. It need not be expensive or complex. OTOH many "cruising" oriented boats (not just dinghies) are unnecessarily difficult to handle because the rigs are cumbersome in an attempt to be "strong" and they have sacrificed too much controllability. Could you explain this, please. I undertand you mean that omthing in some cruiser rigs is "to much" and contra productive.... How? What to beware of? I expect DSK can answer for himself, but an obvious one is a stiff, heavy mast that doesn't allow convenient flattening of the sail. NB: The following is not intended to be a flame. Many of your questions sound as if you are not familiar with small-boat sailing. If you get some significant sailing under your belt in existing production boats, you will have a much better idea of where you wanbt to go, and how to get there. If you are not racing, it is all the more important that you _like_ the behavior of the boat you are sailing. The only way to find out what you like is to sail, a lot. Rodney Myrvaagnes J36 Gjo/a Does one child rape really change Strom Thurmond's lifetime record? For better or worse? |
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