Greenheart
Well-Known Member
Apologies: this may not be terribly far off the AWB vs MAB battle of philosophies, I'm afraid.
Is the convenience of inmast furling, at odds with a ready-for-anything, rugged, ocean-sailing philosophy?
I realise (or hope, optimistically) that it's more likely just to be sail shape which suffers under reefing (and thus upwind pace), rather than there being an inevitable foul-up inside the mast, which prevents reefing in a gale, and finally dismasts the yacht, somewhere off the Azores...
...but I found a tasty Alan Pape ketch for sale - great looking yacht, very traditional in lines...except, she's got an in-mast main, which I didn't expect on this design.
Give the pic a click, I haven't mastered full-size photos here yet.
View attachment 28024
Granted, she may have been the plaything of somebody who deeply doubts his ability to clamber about on the coachroof in a strong breeze...but are in-mast arrangements still derided as they were initially, twenty years or more back?
Is the convenience of inmast furling, at odds with a ready-for-anything, rugged, ocean-sailing philosophy?
I realise (or hope, optimistically) that it's more likely just to be sail shape which suffers under reefing (and thus upwind pace), rather than there being an inevitable foul-up inside the mast, which prevents reefing in a gale, and finally dismasts the yacht, somewhere off the Azores...
...but I found a tasty Alan Pape ketch for sale - great looking yacht, very traditional in lines...except, she's got an in-mast main, which I didn't expect on this design.
Give the pic a click, I haven't mastered full-size photos here yet.
View attachment 28024
Granted, she may have been the plaything of somebody who deeply doubts his ability to clamber about on the coachroof in a strong breeze...but are in-mast arrangements still derided as they were initially, twenty years or more back?