macd
Well-Known Member
The Rival shears about until it's blowing a hoolie and then takes up dead straight, until the wind drops or gust passes and the she starts wandering about. It has never really bothered me it is what boats do.
My take on this is that most boats only sheer if there's slack in the rode. If winds are constant (no gusts), the catenary maintains the same curve, pulling the bow to wind with little sheering. (We had this just the other night with winds varying by only a couple of knots: no significant sheering). In gusty conditions, the catenary alternately increases and decreases, pulling the boat forward in the lulls. The resulting slack in the catenary allows the boat to fall away and sheer on the next gust.
Most boats will try to go broadside to the wind when falling away. Boats with pronounced sheer, like your Rival and my old R32, will do so in a more exaggerated fashion.
In strong winds without pronounced lulls the catenary remains straight enough in the (relative) lulls to permit only a little slack when the next gusts comes, just as you describe.
In other words, the catenary acts as both a helpful shock absorber at the end of a sheer, and as a cause of the very sheer it's protecting. (A long snubber is a better shock-absorber, anyway, but carries the same penalty of pulling the boat forward when the wind-load decreases and encouraging sheer).
The Meltemi, here in Greece, is notorious for its gustiness in supposedly 'sheltered' anchorages. The wind will frequently gust to 30-odd knots, then die to a zephyr. The only practical ways to reduce sheering then are a riding sail, or V-anchors (and the latter is often not practicable in a crowded anchorage).
I'm not presenting this as gospel but it seems to fit with my experience. I'd be interested in what others think. Of course, even if true, it doesn't help very much: no-one's likely to fit a rod rode. But maybe a kedge to hold the rode tighter might help? Anyone tried it?