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#1
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Furling or HankOn sails?
Which do you prefer and why? "Todays headsail-reefing/furling systems are extremely reliable. Failure is rare and is usually the result of improper installation or incorrect use. " http://www.cncphotoalbum.com/doityou...llerreefer.htm Somewhat basic but some good tips and info, worth a look. Excellent drawing diagrams. Enjoy Mic. |
#2
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those are good pics and text....
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#3
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Mic wrote:
Furling or HankOn sails? Which do you prefer and why? "Todays headsail-reefing/furling systems are extremely reliable. Failure is rare and is usually the result of improper installation or incorrect use. " http://www.cncphotoalbum.com/doityou...llerreefer.htm Somewhat basic but some good tips and info, worth a look. Excellent drawing diagrams. Enjoy Mic. Thanks Mic.. I've bookmarked the site and printed off the article. When I think of the trouble we had with the old self furling drum on my buddies Mirage 33..... He ended up getting a new Harken model after we lost the mast during a race. |
#4
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Mic wrote:
Furling or HankOn sails? Which do you prefer and why? "Todays headsail-reefing/furling systems are extremely reliable. Failure is rare and is usually the result of improper installation or incorrect use. " http://www.cncphotoalbum.com/doityou...llerreefer.htm Somewhat basic but some good tips and info, worth a look. Excellent drawing diagrams. Enjoy Mic. Even the best genoa-furling systems cannot compare, when the sail is partially-furled, to a hank-on genoa of the correct size and shape. They are a useful compromise when short-handed, but that is all. Dennis. |
#5
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"Dennis Pogson" wrote:
Mic wrote: Furling or HankOn sails? Which do you prefer and why? "Todays headsail-reefing/furling systems are extremely reliable. Failure is rare and is usually the result of improper installation or incorrect use. " http://www.cncphotoalbum.com/doityou...llerreefer.htm Somewhat basic but some good tips and info, worth a look. Excellent drawing diagrams. Enjoy Mic. Even the best genoa-furling systems cannot compare, when the sail is partially-furled, to a hank-on genoa of the correct size and shape. They are a useful compromise when short-handed, but that is all. Dennis. What do you mean "that is all"? Most sailing other than racing is done short-handed. grandma Rosalie |
#6
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Rosalie B. wrote:
"Dennis Pogson" wrote: Mic wrote: Furling or HankOn sails? Which do you prefer and why? "Todays headsail-reefing/furling systems are extremely reliable. Failure is rare and is usually the result of improper installation or incorrect use. " http://www.cncphotoalbum.com/doityou...llerreefer.htm Somewhat basic but some good tips and info, worth a look. Excellent drawing diagrams. Enjoy Mic. Even the best genoa-furling systems cannot compare, when the sail is partially-furled, to a hank-on genoa of the correct size and shape. They are a useful compromise when short-handed, but that is all. Dennis. What do you mean "that is all"? Most sailing other than racing is done short-handed. grandma Rosalie A furler-reefed genoa is less than half as good as a proper sized, proper shaped, proper trimmed decent sail, especially going to weather, when a small raise in the wind may make a difference, the more so as your genny size increases. It is a considerable compromise. Short handed means not enough sailors aboard who can manage the changing of a sail for good purpose. The improvement over a spongebag flopper is worth the effort, especially if sizing down far enough means you can get your automatic jib gear working with a sail small enough to automatically tack foreward of the shrouds. Release the jib halyard from the cockpit, pull a line to pull down the too biggie, easing the boat motion. Go foreward, hank on a smaller sail, change sheet shackle, leaving the large sail on, siezed up snug if it's gonna be a short squall or draggged below if at sea, clamber back to the cockpit and raise the smaller sail. Suddenly, heeling decreases, the airbrakes are off, drag is reduced, speed and apparrant wind increases, footing increases, progress to weather increases, effort and anxiety reduces. Flatten the main, sheet in, and go even better to weather. All this without reefing the main yet. Some boats may do better reefing the main first, but that depends on the individual boat and gear. With my self tending rig at least, when you have done that much, with the club boom previously readied, You no longer need to trim jib sheets every tack. So, being short handed makes the effort invested worth more than just face value. A self tending jib could be rigged under a furling drum system, with a sail set free of the headstay (no hanks!) You would need a spare jib halyard, and your club boom would be a little shorter, and the automatic jib a little smaller. I hang the club boom "gooseneck carabiner" from the chain pennant on the tack of the jib. It was done that way for ease of adjustment and tuning. As a fringe benefit, having a club boom, whisker pole or spinnaker pole about the same length as your main boom means you can easily rig a bipod to raise or lower your mast. Ain't synergy great? Terry K |
#7
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Don...that can be a problem in a race...
;-) "after we lost the mast during a race" |
#9
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Len wrote:
On Wed, 19 Oct 2005 13:12:23 GMT, (Mic) wrote: Furling or HankOn sails? Which do you prefer and why? "Todays headsail-reefing/furling systems are extremely reliable. Failure is rare and is usually the result of improper installation or incorrect use. " http://www.cncphotoalbum.com/doityou...llerreefer.htm Somewhat basic but some good tips and info, worth a look. Excellent drawing diagrams. Enjoy Mic. For ease of handling and cause we don't race we chose a furling genoa. The only thing is, what to do when you need to set a storm jib. A real bit of wind will probably tear a furled genoa apart. ATN claims they have a solution: the ATN Galesail. Haven't had any experience with it but I think I'd rather use a simple and strong hank-on storm jib than installing this sleeve over the furled genoa first. So, I'm glad we have an inner forestay. I have thought about a second furler on the inner forestay but I decided not to for this reason. Len S/v Present Wise man! Dennis. |
#10
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Even the best genoa-furling systems cannot compare, when the sail is
partially-furled, to a hank-on genoa of the correct size and shape. They are a useful compromise when short-handed, but that is all. I am a hank-on partisan, because that is what I have, I know how to use it, how to fix it and how to change sails quickly and safely. I also like the performance boost, as seen in how I can race and beat larger boats with lower PHRFs if they have furling unless it's a downwind run, say. Part of this is pointing ability, the rest is that I can carry a properly cut No. 1 instead of the typical vaguely yankee cut of most compromising furling genoas. But I am 44 and am "fast cruising" in Lake Ontario on an IOR performance cruiser that likes the wind. Also, I get free sails from racers I can cut to fit for cruising purposes for a hundred bucks or so to convert tape luff to hanks. This, needless to say, means my biggest inconvenience is storing slightly worn but perfectly fine sails in the joists of my garage until I need to cycle them in my boat. With new genoas and working jibs at over $2,000, I can bear a little stretch or a couple of patches whereas the racing guys buy new Kevlar/Mylar suits of sails every three or four years for $10K. Thank you, crazy racers...G I would argue that cruisers, older sailors or those unhappy with the idea of heavy weather deck work tip the balance in favour of furling. It's not foolproof or bulletproof, however, and I've seen problems both expensive and dangerous due to improper use or mechanical failure. Just last week in a blow I called a fellow yachtie to tell him his genoa was shredding and to ask permission to secure it. Well, I got aboard and his furling line was completely out...I could do nothing until more bodies were aboard to do a controlled unfurling of the remains and then a proper furling. So it depends on your intended use, fitness level, age and skill, but while less can go wrong with hank-ons, people who furl are rarely washed off the foredeck carrying a 100 lb. foresail. My wife the foredecker would appreciate less folding down and more room below as well, but our four-year-old can make a fort from the sail bags and nap very safely in the middle of them in the roughest seas. One last comment: I would urge anyone with a cutter rig to keep the staysail hank on, because in a bad blow that can destroy the furled foresail, the staysail will usually hang in there as it can be reefed down or swapped for a storm jib safely closer to the mast. R. |