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On Sat, 9 Aug 2008 21:06:04 -0400, in message
"Roger Long" wrote: The thing that got me thinking about the smaller, compromize Genoa I had built was noticing how much faster the boat was to windward with the small working jib in fresh breezes. The performance difference between the 150% and the working jib (about a 110% overlap) even in light air and on reaches was much less than the difference in sail area would indicate. I don't know about anybody else, but my racing bias tends towards too much sail. The last couple of weeks we went cruising with the cocktail jib (about 115% with a really high clew) on the furler. As best I could tell, the speed penalty was 10 or 15 percent and 3 or 5 degrees of point. Based on observing the boats around us, most cruisers don't seem to care about that. The really big plus is that you can carry a sail like that well up to about 25 knots to weather without having to roll it in, and you can do what we call "cruising tacks" -- slow turns with enough time luffing to trim without much power grinding. Ryk |
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