mrming
Well-Known Member
Dan - as someone who has experimented with both kinds of kites (albeit on a small, racy but non-planing keelboat), here's what I've learned:
The asymmetric is much less hassle to hoist, gybe and drop.
Asymmetrics tend to be larger, and when it's windy our 37sqm sail is a bit of a handful, requiring close coordination between driver and trimmer. Not a concern for your light weather antics.
The sailing the angles thing is only worth it if your boat can plane easily and bring the apparent wind forward, allowing you to bear away in the process (I presume an Osprey with one crew is very much in that category but I don't know the boats well so feel free to correct me).
There's also another important factor which was alluded to earlier in the thread. We race in a narrow tidal river where the prevailing wind means it's usually a run or a broad reach downwind. You usually either have to get right into the shallows to avoid adverse current, or stay in the deep water to keep in favourable current. An asymmetric is not suitable in either situation, as sailing the angles takes you repeatedly into the unfavourable current and back again.
You can't sail anywhere near DDW with an asymmetric unless you have a canting sprint (like a Mini 6.5) or you fly one from a conventional pole (negating the ease of use benefit). The talk of goose winging is nonsense - you would have to pole out the clew which again is too much complexity for a single hander.
Our boat came with a nearly new a-sail and a fancy Selden bowsprit, and I spent a season gybing back and forth just crossing the sterns of my competitors before I cracked and bought / set up a conventional kite. Very occasionally if there is a long reach in the course we'll break it out, but the rest of the time it sits downstairs unused and unloved while we sail down the run with our symmetrical kite, laughing at our earlier foolishness.
The asymmetric is much less hassle to hoist, gybe and drop.
Asymmetrics tend to be larger, and when it's windy our 37sqm sail is a bit of a handful, requiring close coordination between driver and trimmer. Not a concern for your light weather antics.
The sailing the angles thing is only worth it if your boat can plane easily and bring the apparent wind forward, allowing you to bear away in the process (I presume an Osprey with one crew is very much in that category but I don't know the boats well so feel free to correct me).
There's also another important factor which was alluded to earlier in the thread. We race in a narrow tidal river where the prevailing wind means it's usually a run or a broad reach downwind. You usually either have to get right into the shallows to avoid adverse current, or stay in the deep water to keep in favourable current. An asymmetric is not suitable in either situation, as sailing the angles takes you repeatedly into the unfavourable current and back again.
You can't sail anywhere near DDW with an asymmetric unless you have a canting sprint (like a Mini 6.5) or you fly one from a conventional pole (negating the ease of use benefit). The talk of goose winging is nonsense - you would have to pole out the clew which again is too much complexity for a single hander.
Our boat came with a nearly new a-sail and a fancy Selden bowsprit, and I spent a season gybing back and forth just crossing the sterns of my competitors before I cracked and bought / set up a conventional kite. Very occasionally if there is a long reach in the course we'll break it out, but the rest of the time it sits downstairs unused and unloved while we sail down the run with our symmetrical kite, laughing at our earlier foolishness.
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