tmh900
Well-Known Member
In the context of: 'fractional rigs are increasingly found on cruising yachts' I am trying to find out more about them.
I have two good books on rigs and sail trim:
Yachting Monthly Sail Power and Sail & Rig Tuning by Ivar Dedekam. Both cover the basics of fractional rigs, but I have a couple of questions I wonder if any 4-um-ites could help to answer:
1. Any recommendations for a good book/web site on the subject of fractional rigs?
2. I am confused by something in the second book above...
"The traditional fractional rig, normally with in-line spreaders must use running backstays (runners) to stabilise the rig. Checkstays are mostly used on racing yachts to control the mast bend in the middle and lower parts of the mast.
The runners have the same function as the backstay on a masthead rig. Forestay sag will decrease and the mast will bend to flatten the main, when you tighten the runner. The permanent backstay on such a fractional rig is primarily an insurance against rig failure when gybing"
How can the mast bend when the runner is pulling the mast at the point where to forestay is attached? You'd still need to tighten the backstay (at the mast head) to bend the mast forward and flatten the main would you not????
3. The simplest type of fractional rig - with swept back spreaders, no runners or checkstays, is only used on small boats - 35 feet or less. The problem here is controlling forestay tension. Are there any alternatives that don't suffer this problem that are easily handled?
TIA
I have two good books on rigs and sail trim:
Yachting Monthly Sail Power and Sail & Rig Tuning by Ivar Dedekam. Both cover the basics of fractional rigs, but I have a couple of questions I wonder if any 4-um-ites could help to answer:
1. Any recommendations for a good book/web site on the subject of fractional rigs?
2. I am confused by something in the second book above...
"The traditional fractional rig, normally with in-line spreaders must use running backstays (runners) to stabilise the rig. Checkstays are mostly used on racing yachts to control the mast bend in the middle and lower parts of the mast.
The runners have the same function as the backstay on a masthead rig. Forestay sag will decrease and the mast will bend to flatten the main, when you tighten the runner. The permanent backstay on such a fractional rig is primarily an insurance against rig failure when gybing"
How can the mast bend when the runner is pulling the mast at the point where to forestay is attached? You'd still need to tighten the backstay (at the mast head) to bend the mast forward and flatten the main would you not????
3. The simplest type of fractional rig - with swept back spreaders, no runners or checkstays, is only used on small boats - 35 feet or less. The problem here is controlling forestay tension. Are there any alternatives that don't suffer this problem that are easily handled?
TIA