skyflyer
Well-Known Member
I'm going to replace my (original, 1996!) genoa at the end of this season and would like some advice as to what would be the best sizing given the following criteria. I should point out that my current 135% genoa is not giving us great pointing - although whether that is due to age or sizing I don't know!
32ft masthead rigged sailboat with a broadish beam (13ft) and sugar scoop stern (i.e. it doesn't narrow significantly once aft of max beam). 4.5 tonne displacement, drawing 1.3m with a wing keel of approx 2.5 tonnes.
Heres the spec sheet of the Mk 2 model which is pretty similar
I dont race I only cruise. We happily get 6+ knots at the start of the season before the hull grows the green stuff,. In very light winds I either accept that I don't need to be anywhere and let things happen slowly, or if I do need to be somewhere we motor; i.e. light wind performance isn't much of an issue.
But I do get hacked off that we don't point well to wind. Obviously there isn't much keel area so its never going to be great, but once the wind gets up we get a fair bit of weather helm too, which doesn't help matters. We seem to reef (main and genoa) quite a lot of the time (boat based in Cornwall)
I'm still feeling my way on the finer points (actually, probably on some of the basic points) of sail trim and rigging, but I suspect I might be better off with a smaller genoa that spends most of its time fully unfurled rather than a large one that spends most of its time partly furled up.
So do I go 120%, or would a new 135% likley give me a noticeable improvement?
By the way the main is quite new and standing rigging recently replaced too
(Perhaps worth stating that I used to think the primary cure for too much weather helm was reefing the main, but it has since been suggested to me that on a masthead rig the first thing to do is reef in the genoa - can't quite work this out; anyone care to explain?)
32ft masthead rigged sailboat with a broadish beam (13ft) and sugar scoop stern (i.e. it doesn't narrow significantly once aft of max beam). 4.5 tonne displacement, drawing 1.3m with a wing keel of approx 2.5 tonnes.
Heres the spec sheet of the Mk 2 model which is pretty similar
I dont race I only cruise. We happily get 6+ knots at the start of the season before the hull grows the green stuff,. In very light winds I either accept that I don't need to be anywhere and let things happen slowly, or if I do need to be somewhere we motor; i.e. light wind performance isn't much of an issue.
But I do get hacked off that we don't point well to wind. Obviously there isn't much keel area so its never going to be great, but once the wind gets up we get a fair bit of weather helm too, which doesn't help matters. We seem to reef (main and genoa) quite a lot of the time (boat based in Cornwall)
I'm still feeling my way on the finer points (actually, probably on some of the basic points) of sail trim and rigging, but I suspect I might be better off with a smaller genoa that spends most of its time fully unfurled rather than a large one that spends most of its time partly furled up.
So do I go 120%, or would a new 135% likley give me a noticeable improvement?
By the way the main is quite new and standing rigging recently replaced too
(Perhaps worth stating that I used to think the primary cure for too much weather helm was reefing the main, but it has since been suggested to me that on a masthead rig the first thing to do is reef in the genoa - can't quite work this out; anyone care to explain?)