andybussell
Well-Known Member
I'm replacing my boom cover for the mainsail and am considering a Doyle stack pack. Anybody had experience with these or other types. All advice gratefully received and Thanks in advance.
Is a 'stackpack' any more than lazy jacks with a built in sail cover?
The only disadvantage with a stackpack, particularly if you have a heavily roached sail or a fully battened one where the battens stand slightly proud of the leech, is that you have to be pointing dead to windward when you raise the sail or it will keep getting stuck on the stackpack lines.
As Vyv says, dropping the sail is a doddle.
Richard
The only disadvantage with a stackpack, particularly if you have a heavily roached sail or a fully battened one where the battens stand slightly proud of the leech, is that you have to be pointing dead to windward when you raise the sail or it will keep getting stuck on the stackpack lines.
As Vyv says, dropping the sail is a doddle.
Richard
We don't have a problem hoisting a few degrees off wind, with main sheet slack.
I think that's where the catamaran mainsail with a large roach works against us. Even with the main sheet slackened right off the sail flaps from side to side as it goes up. We are getting better at it as the years go by and probably raise it without a problem 50% of the time. I also wonder if the 2:1 gearing on the main halyard makes it worse as we cannot raise the sail quickly enough to whizz it up when the alignment is just right. 1:1 gearing would be better but the sail would be just too heavy after the first few metres.
Like everything with boats, it's a compromise!
Richard
I'm replacing my boom cover for the mainsail and am considering a Doyle stack pack. Anybody had experience with these or other types. All advice gratefully received and Thanks in advance.
Is a 'stackpack' any more than lazy jacks with a built in sail cover?
If you only look at the basics then I suppose that is right. It's the detail that makes the difference. The pack is battened at the upper 'corners', which helps the sail to drop into it. There are double-zipped ports to enable reefing pennants to pass around the boom. Ours has straps with buckles so that the pack can be rolled and strapped up against the boom, not something we would use on short trips but worthwhile on longer passages. There are netting patches on the lower parts to allow a wet sail to drain.
There is a great deal of work in a good stackpack, justifying its fairly high price.
I think that's where the catamaran mainsail with a large roach works against us. Even with the main sheet slackened right off the sail flaps from side to side as it goes up. We are getting better at it as the years go by and probably raise it without a problem 50% of the time. I also wonder if the 2:1 gearing on the main halyard makes it worse as we cannot raise the sail quickly enough to whizz it up when the alignment is just right. 1:1 gearing would be better but the sail would be just too heavy after the first few metres.
Like everything with boats, it's a compromise!
Richard
Agree but advantages of stackpack outweigh probs of battens catching lazyjacks
If you only look at the basics then I suppose that is right. It's the detail that makes the difference. The pack is battened at the upper 'corners', which helps the sail to drop into it. There are double-zipped ports to enable reefing pennants to pass around the boom. Ours has straps with buckles so that the pack can be rolled and strapped up against the boom, not something we would use on short trips but worthwhile on longer passages. There are netting patches on the lower parts to allow a wet sail to drain.
There is a great deal of work in a good stackpack, justifying its fairly high price.
Hmm. I reckon the time I waste disentangling battens every flipping time easily outweighs the time I'd spend flaking the sail down. May try a season with a normal cover to see if I'm right.
My chum ( usually singlehanded, inexperienced ) has just fitted a stackpack on his Centaur; far from being a labour saving device the lazyjacks make it a bloody nightmare..