greeny
Well-Known Member
Orange for storm jibs is a relatively modern choice / regulation? I've had many storm jibs in standard white cloth in years past.
Thanks for all the feedback guys, lots of good ideas and suggestions.But as others have said, cloth weight is going to be the biggest clue. If it's heavy then you could still be looking at an extremely small and not orange storm sail.
There is no obligation to have a storm sail orange - ours is white - but as Ops sail is light weight means its normal wind only.Thanks for all the feedback guys, lots of good ideas and suggestions.
The sail cloth isnt that heavy and as its white I'm beginning to rule out the storm sail idea.
Given everything written above the riding sail idea would seem most likely... and this boat has the shallow draft keel that I guess may benefit from something like this more than others.
The boat spent the first ten years of its life in La Rochelle any one know if this is the sort of thing that the French do?
There is a report on the My hanse website of an experienced sailor trying to use a purpose made one in a gale. He said it was absolutely useless ( dangerous in fact) as it could not be hoisted against the friction of the existing furled sail in heavy wind. He had test hoisted it in light wind, but it was a disaster when he tried to use it in anger.looks like a storm jib to me, we had a bag/sock made up to go around the furrled genoa so we could still use it, you just need webbing straps with D rings at the correct spacing to hank it on to and rap the sock around the furrled genoa, seemed to work ok and gave us the option of using the sail with minimal costs, i think one of the sail makers does a simular storm jib in a bag that raps around the furrled genoa?
There is a report on the My hanse website of an experienced sailor trying to use a purpose made one in a gale. He said it was absolutely useless ( dangerous in fact) as it could not be hoisted against the friction of the existing furled sail in heavy wind. He had test hoisted it in light wind, but it was a disaster when he tried to use it in anger.
I imagine that on a big yacht they would have facilities for an inner forestay any way.I have often wondered about that style of wrap around fitting. Sounded perhaps OK to get it hoist on big yacht with multiple crew gathered on foredeck - however thats not where you want all those folk.
Our boats wont be going anywhere to windward in F8 as not close winded at the best of times so we just have trisail and storm mains respectively, and use highly furled genoa, but I had considered wrap around storm foresail though for our cruising could not really justify it on either cost or storage