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On 2005-05-31, Flying Tadpole wrote:
I sail with arcane rigs, so some of what I do isn't translatable. However, on both the light schooner and Lady Kate the AS29, turning up into a bullet is a recipe for capsize and swamping in the one, and knockdown in the other. The light schooner (a boat requiring crew) as an open and low boat would already be sailing with her lee rail down. A sharp turn into the wind would knock her down further, assisted by a powerful spade rudder tending to act as an elevator plane because of the angle, both reinforcing the knockdown; also stop her dead allowing the waves to take her over also. Bearing away, turning downwind, brings the boat up to level rather than heeled. I'm trying to picture turning up producing more heeling force and having difficulty. I've been sailing dinghies recently and if hit by a gust, feathering up reduces the heeling force whilst bearing away places more of the sail square on to the wind and increases the heeling. How is the schooner different? -- Andy Repton |
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