Roberto
Well-Known Member
Not relevant to the OP or anyone sailing near sailmakers lofts, but there is also the issue of repairability. Laminate sails are very difficult (probably impossible) to repair with onboard means. On a big boat delivery from the US after two days we broke the genoa and there were shreds of plastic and carbon filaments flapping all over the place, one third of the sail basically disappeared; in Horta the local guy used the remains of the sail as sort of template to sew layers and layers of full width dacron to rebuild some sort of shape, the owner bought a new sail delivered to Gibraltar.Interesting thread.
In the Tropics, laminate sails have a short life. A Captain on a 72ft cruiser/racer (that only cruises these days) who moves between the .Caribbean and the Med says they replace their laminate sails every 5 years. UV kills them. They are .North sails.
My experience, albeit several years ago with the laminate sails that came on my last boat, was that 4 years killed those sails. Another guy here got 3 years out of his laminate genoa. Really not an issue in the UK but anybody thinking of doing an Atlantic circuit, you may be better putting on a set of .Dacron sails and saving your laminates for when you get home. The sun here is brutal.
If I count the number of times I restitched or repaired my own or other people dacron sails with the sewing machine I kept on board...
My last genoa is in Hydranet, the sailmaker showed me a couple of sails having 2-4 transats and they were like new, very convincing fabric.


