Triassic
Well-Known Member
You raise a point there which i tend to disagree with many & at the risk of a thread drift i will raise it.
I always put stopper knots in my ropes.
I don't think it is a thread drift as it is relevant to an asymmetric spinnaker set up. I'd be inclined to agree with your principal with the exception of this example, for the very reasons that I explained. If you have to stop the boat in a hurry, and a MOB is one of them, then the easiest way is to immediately round up into the wind. With every sail plan except a spinnaker this is both practicable and recommended. If you try and do it with the spinnaker still up you will either place the boat in danger, or at the very least completely out of control. You certainly won't have a chance of going back upwind to recover your casualty, and if you've ever tried to drop a spinnaker that it pinned into your mast and rigging you'll know that that is no easy feat either..... In the perfect world it would be lovely to bear away, set the auto pilot to hold her on course (we race two handed remember, if one of us is MOB the other is on their own) and then go forward and drop the spinnaker in the normal way. Conservatively I reckon that would take two or three minutes, and that's assuming the pilot is already in place, so that's going to leave us over half a mile from the casualty, not the two boat lengths I'll be if I simply lift the two clutches holding the tack and halyard....... Yes, it's a bugger having to re-sheeve the halyard but we drop the mast at the end of play anyhow so it's not that big a deal!