BrianH
Well-Known Member
On the furling thing, if you search here there's plenty of cases of furling that has got stuck. And as everyone knows, a disaster is usually a combination of little things rather than one big catastrophe. So it's possible singlehanded you don't get your boom angle/wind angle/topping lift tension/outhaul tension all spot on and make a hash of it and things escalate from there. I'd have in boom furling, simply because if I'm on my own and in the sh1t I can run along the boom with a bread knife and pull the rest down by hand, and potentially even be able to get the sail repaired afterwards, but not having that option would worry me for an in-mast system.
That was my thinking too and why I chose in-boom mainsail furling. In the northern Adriatic a bora can hit suddenly out of nowhere and being single-handed, fast and foolproof reefing is critical.
No need to be cutting sail even if the simple rolling inner boom should jam - it happened to me once due to my negligence in letting the sail overlap within the too-small outer boom shell - the remaining sail can still be easily dropped and lashed to the boom.