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Roy Smith wrote:
We've got a one-season old North main and genoa on our J/24. Ever since it was new, I've had troubles getting all the teltails to fly right. Caveat - I have no J24 experience. I have done jib and main on Sonars (fractional) and on a Schock 35 (masthead) for many years. Some of these suggestions you can do during a race and some would be better done before a race or on a separate on-the-water session. If the angle of the sail to the wind is the same, top to bottom, then all tell-tales should fly. (I am going to assume that the sail is not defective.) I don't like the "just ignore it" answer. You paid good money for the sail and you have right to satisfaction. If you look up the leech of the jib the curve should follow the shape of the main. There should be no twist-off at the top and no cupping. If the old sail were white (dacron) it may have stretched into a shape that matches the boat. Is the backstay set correctly? That will influence the sag in the headstay. Try more backstay and see if it improves the situation. Is the mast straight? Does it sag off to one side or the other? Have someone look up the mast while you are close-hauled. Have you checked the shroud tension? Is the headstay length correct? If you have had the mast off the boat around the time that you got the new sail, you should recheck everything. How is the main? If it is really soft it could be sagging into the wind flow around the jib and throwing that off. You could try making the main really flat (backstay, vang, cunningham, halyard all on hard) and see if it changes the jib. The jib car position should not be all the way forward. The jib car/jib sheet is a mix and match thing. The car is used to try to get all the tell-tales to break together, top to bottom. Each change of the car requires a tweak of the the sheet. The car all the way forward would result in a very tight top of the jib and a very loose foot. Since the problem is consistent for a year, it is probably not a wind issue, but I think that I should mention that wind shear (difference in wind direction between the boom and the mast-head) can throw things off. I suggest getting a tuning guide from the sailmaker. it may be available on the web. Go through all the checks to make sure you have the boat set up right. If that doesn't fix the problem invite the sailmaker on board for a race to show you how to set up the sail. Another thing you can do periodically is to invite another skipper on board as crew. He can make suggestions which you can take or reject. You can also crew on another boat and watch how that skipper does things. Do this at least once a year even if you get your current tuning problems fixed. A personal gripe - When you read books, magazine articles, or advice from others, you get rules of thumb. They are the general rules to follow. To step up to the next level you need to learn when and how to break the rules of thumb. You need to know how the boat "feels" and how the sails look. There are no books for that. Let me know how things work out. Thanks, tom of the Swee****er Sea St. Paul, MN |
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