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Main and Genoa (or spinn) broad reaching off to *keep the apparent wind up* and the sails ventilated. There is NO reason in the world to run dead down wind (except at hull speed) .... except to miss land or other hard objects. Just look at the polar diagrams for just about any boat ..... for downwind VMG a broad reach is the fastest overall, a dead run is the ultimate slowness. In article s.com, Wendy wrote: "JAXAshby" wrote in message ... I personally know a guy who spent 15 days of a 45 day Atlantic crossing becalmed. This is why the gods created diesel engines ![]() Most long distance cruisers have set of nylon sails. Lin and Larry Pardey had a nylon mainsail built so their boat wouldn't slop around in lite airs (large, lite sails in lite winds also means you can not point nearly as high, as your boat speed climbs relative to the wind speed). Ok, this brings some questions to mind. In a cutter, would one do as well to simply drop the main in very light airs and go with the staysail and jib? Or use the mainsail as well with, say, a preventer in case one was caught off-guard, and simply relax a bit? Strategising here... |
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