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main sail mast furling
I would like to know if the performance of the sail is diminished with main
sail that is furled in the mast versus the conventional type sail? |
main sail mast furling
The mainsail will have no battens, so it will not hold its shape as well as
a conventional main, and the leach will be concave, reducing the area. Also, it will probably be loose-footed, and this further affects the shape, regardless of how tight the foot is pulled. -- Jeff Richards "Guy Schwartz" wrote in message m... I would like to know if the performance of the sail is diminished with main sail that is furled in the mast versus the conventional type sail? |
main sail mast furling
On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 07:07:18 GMT, "Jeff Richards"
wrote: The mainsail will have no battens, so it will not hold its shape as well= as a conventional main, and the leach will be concave, reducing the area. Also, it will probably be loose-footed, and this further affects the = shape, regardless of how tight the foot is pulled. Vertical battens are sometimes used with in-mast furling systems. IMHO performance is probably diminished a little but not that most cruising types would notice. A cunningham would probably not be used. |
main sail mast furling
On Mon, 13 Oct 2003 04:47:49 GMT, "Guy Schwartz"
wrote: I would like to know if the performance of the sail is diminished with main sail that is furled in the mast versus the conventional type sail? In general yes. Also the extra weight aloft will increase the amount of heel (not desireable). Take a good look at some of the in-boom systems now available. Good sail shape, can still use a full batten main. An you can still drop the main if it jams at a time when reducing sail is very advisable. |
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