Babylon
Well-Known Member
Had the chute hoisted briefly for the first time on Saturday, and what a beautiful sail it is!
But both myself and my crew had never used a cruising chute before, so it was all a little experimental, and not a little stressful given the concentration of boats in the Solent this weekend. So a few basic questions:
(1) The chute came with a 2m tack line spliced to the tack, which proved to be a little tricky to ease and tension by hand on the foredeck, especially as the forces seemed considerable once the sail filled in, even in a fairly light breeze. Is this usual, or should I replace it with a long tack led back to a cockpit winch?
(2) There is a block shackled to the the stem-head just aft of the bow-roller, through which I led the tack line. Is this the correct position for it?
(3) After several rapid-succession and hair-raising collision-avoidance manoevres (the chute really pulls and things started to happen pretty fast), we decided to drop it. I pulled it in from the foredeck, getting some of the sail wet as it collapsed into the water - should I have pulled it in from under the boom?
(4) How does one repack the chute in the bag? I simply stuffed it back it, making sure I left the head, tack and clew hanging out till the last. But how would I then know that the chute wouldn't be twisted next time we wanted to hoist it, or do I have to have the whole thing out in the cabin each time, repack it carefully and hope for the best?
(4b) Is stuffing it the correct way to leave it in the bag, or should one later flake or fold it properly when ashore?
(5) I'd consider getting a snuffer, but as we're only 27ft long and as the chute isn't that enormous, I'd really like to learn a reliable and safe way of handling it direct from a traditional sail-bag.
Thanks
Babs
But both myself and my crew had never used a cruising chute before, so it was all a little experimental, and not a little stressful given the concentration of boats in the Solent this weekend. So a few basic questions:
(1) The chute came with a 2m tack line spliced to the tack, which proved to be a little tricky to ease and tension by hand on the foredeck, especially as the forces seemed considerable once the sail filled in, even in a fairly light breeze. Is this usual, or should I replace it with a long tack led back to a cockpit winch?
(2) There is a block shackled to the the stem-head just aft of the bow-roller, through which I led the tack line. Is this the correct position for it?
(3) After several rapid-succession and hair-raising collision-avoidance manoevres (the chute really pulls and things started to happen pretty fast), we decided to drop it. I pulled it in from the foredeck, getting some of the sail wet as it collapsed into the water - should I have pulled it in from under the boom?
(4) How does one repack the chute in the bag? I simply stuffed it back it, making sure I left the head, tack and clew hanging out till the last. But how would I then know that the chute wouldn't be twisted next time we wanted to hoist it, or do I have to have the whole thing out in the cabin each time, repack it carefully and hope for the best?
(4b) Is stuffing it the correct way to leave it in the bag, or should one later flake or fold it properly when ashore?
(5) I'd consider getting a snuffer, but as we're only 27ft long and as the chute isn't that enormous, I'd really like to learn a reliable and safe way of handling it direct from a traditional sail-bag.
Thanks
Babs