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"DSK" wrote in
I disagree. I've never ever sailed one that wouldn't "go fast enough" under main alone. The problem is not top speed, it's how you try to get the boat to accelerate from stopped. That's a pretty silly disagreement since you haven't sailed my boat. I wasn't talking about the fuzzy concept of "fast enough", my boat does that. I was talking about the more quantifiable ability to continue steering itself with the helm locked long enough to go down below and get more clothes, check a chart without getting spray on it, grab something to eat, or walk up to the bow to tend to something. My specific, individual, boat does that when sailing at the speed that it can maintain under main when slowing down from a full sail plan or motor sailing. It won't do it at the speed it can reach with its relatively small main alone, even working up from a broad reach. Even under a full sail plan, most boats will slow down to a higher speed in many conditions than they can be accelerated to. On my boat, in strong winds, that speed difference just brackets the conditions of equilibrium for self steering to windward which is always a bit elusive in fin keel boats. -- Roger Long |
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