T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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628.1 | | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Fri Aug 21 1987 16:46 | 19 |
| My vote goes to lazyness. I'd be willing to bet the folks you see
that way have roller furling genoas.
On the way in from a solo trip, I often drop the main and fold it
while the boat sails along on genoa alone, the last few hundred
yards before the narrow channel leading to our cove. This is very
nice for me since I usually plan the last leg so I am between a
reach and close hauled, which makes flaking the mainsail on the
boom easier. I also dont have to listen to the engine for a few
more minutes, and talk the auto pilot into maintaining a steady
into irons attitude while motoring dead slow. The boat speed sure
does drop though, at least a knot, sometimes 2 or 3 (more in lighter
air than in a breeze).
Oh yea. The genoa is roller furled, and stows in about 10-15 seconds,
so it is convient to do moments before motoring is a must.
Walt
|
628.2 | Those lazy days of summer | CSSE::COUTURE | | Fri Aug 21 1987 17:20 | 9 |
| Laziness, absolutely. I'm afraid I'm among the guilty, too.
Obviously, I can get her to balance much better with a reef and
partially furled main. On the other hand, I can get her closer
to the wind if I don't have to partially furl the genny (better
sail shape). Mostly, it depends on how long I've got. If I'm
trying to steal some evening time after work, I'll do whatever
gets me out on the water the fastest.
|
628.3 | How would Dickson handle it? | NRADM3::MITCHELL | | Mon Aug 24 1987 17:25 | 16 |
|
Laziness is part of it I'm sure. In my case though its due to
lack of skill on the crew. My wife is a complete neophyte and
some things require a sense or instinct..something she doesn't
have yet. I drop the main so I don't get into a bad situation
where I may have to be near the helm.
I don't think I could bring my 27' rig into Marblehead Channel
with Autohelm ,by myself, dodge the pots, the boats, drop the
main and secure it, stroll back to the cockpit, reef the jib,
turn on the motor, and not be a little worried about the wind
blowing at 25 knots.
___GM___
|
628.4 | more speculation ... | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Tue Aug 25 1987 13:50 | 17 |
| We too have noticed many boats with only a large headsail up in a brisk
breeze. Perhaps the reason is laziness since the mainsail cover is
usually still on. However, we've also noticed that the headsail is
frequently a large one (a 130 genoa or larger) that is roller furled.
Perhaps the explanation is that it is too difficult to change to a
smaller headsail (if there is even a smaller one to change to) and/or
the sail shape when roller reefed is so poor that it is preferable to
use an unreefed genoa and no mainsail. Or maybe the people on board
don't know how to sail. Besides, if one believes the advertising
wallahs, sailing is supposed to be easy.
By the time the wind is blowing 25 kts, we are usually down to a 100%
jib and a single reefed main. This gives good balance and enough drive
to sail to weather through a chop.
Alan
|