john_morris_uk
Well-Known Member
Keen, He asked what to look for and its a bit of chicken and egg with sheeting angles as in which comes first? Hopefully the designer of the boat will have sorted out what is going to work and what isn't. What is certainly true is that a boat with wide sheeting angles is never going to be close winded. Therefore I suggested that one thing he might look for is narrow sheeting angles as a sign that the thing might be close winded.Other way round. The sheeting angle reflects the pointing ability of the boat, it doesn't define it. Sheet too close on a boat that can't point, and you're just stalling out the jib. Sheet to wide and you're just giving away height.
Windward ability is determined by the aero-hydrodynamic efficiencies of the hull & foils, and the rig. They have to work together, and for absolute best performance you need the best efficiency of both sails and hull & foils.
In all monohull restricted racing classes which limit sail area, but give you freedom on how to arrange it (Thames A raters, Bembridge Redwings, International 14s, 18' skiffs, NS14s, Nat 12s, Merlin Rockets etc), the answer for rig efficiency is a high aspect ratio rig, without overlapping sails.
In probably the best pointing boats around - ACCs (which, AUIU, could squeeze down to tacking angles under 60), the final hullform shows the answer for the most efficient hull - narrow, with a deep keel with lots of lead at the end of a high aspect, short chord foil (with a trim tab). Of course, having world class sailors to drive these foils does help, as average Joes like me would be stalling them out all the time, and spending a lot of time going sideways.
Light rigs (carbon where allowed) and heavy keels give you more power, which means you go faster, & can reef later.
Of course, while ACCs point like a badger, in terms of absolute VMG, they would be left for dust by the current AC45 cats. The cats might be tacking through bigger angles, but they're going a lot faster....
eg In the realm of everyday sailing and cruising yachts one might look at, Island Packets are never very close winded as their shrouds come out to the gun'l and the sheets lead outside. Even if they were built with fantastic hulls and fantastic high aspect rigs etc , they will be never be very close winded as you can't get the headsail in enough.