In-mast or in boom furling?

The advantages of furling in the boom are that it brings the sail down where you can get at it, e.g. in the event of a jam, plus it removes a lot of weight from aloft thereby improving stability.

On the down side it is harder to get a good sail shape because of the bunching of the luff rope. Also it relies on the sail feeding into the luff groove reliably. Something those of us who have fed sails into dinghy masts will be sceptical about.
 
The advantages of furling in the boom are that it brings the sail down where you can get at it, e.g. in the event of a jam, plus it removes a lot of weight from aloft thereby improving stability.

On the down side it is harder to get a good sail shape because of the bunching of the luff rope. Also it relies on the sail feeding into the luff groove reliably. Something those of us who have fed sails into dinghy masts will be sceptical about.

Most vessels that can carry in boom furling also have fully battened mainsail with luff cars, ( See Oyster ) so sail shape is far superior. downside is added windage from oversized boom.
In mast is great till the sails get older and wrinkle whilst furling causing jamming.
Hence there is no definitive answer...
I want an Oyster though so I will plump for in boom !!;)
 
In boom furling is the latest thing and it appears to have less problems as with the in mast furling; also the boom furling makes more sense

Yes but it's important to have a means of ensuring that the boom angle remains constant. I met an owner who had real problems when his boom vang broke.

My own preference would be for slab reefing with lazy jacks/bag.
 
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i spent some time discussing this with the manufacturers at the southampton boat show. it seems that once the in-boom system is accurately set up- to within 0.5 of a degree, then it is trouble free. the main advantage being that in heavy weather the furled sail weight is much lower making the boat more stable, the other being the cut and battening of the sail improves performance.
i could not justify the cost - about 4k- but if money were no object id fit one tomorrow.
 
How do you get foot tension when reefed with these new in boom furlers? Is there some gizmo in the slot that grabs the leech and pulls it aft?
 
You don't in any effective manner. I just wondered if the in boom arrangement had addressed the sail shape issue of in spar furling sails, what with it being an 'advancement' and all.

That we've seen roller boom furling, in mast furling and now in boom furling, all of which supposedly offered benefits over slab reefing, yet eons after its advent slab reefing is still going strong, speaks for itself.
 
Both seem to have lots of problems. I'd stick to slab reefing if I were you.
Every system has its advantages and disadvantages. Usually, it's a trade off between performance and ease of handling, with furlers sacrificing some performance in light winds, but gaining strongly in ease and speed of reefing in strong winds, especially when short handed. Slabs are fiddly to hoist (battens catching in lines) and slower to set correctly when reefing, with loops of rope to catch things if you're not organised. So they need more care.

Nice advantage for in mast rolling, rarely mentioned, is the sunny climate advantage of a small shadow. Means your solar panels are easier to position . . .
 
Not an opinion, more of a report; A friend had "in boom" fitted at GBP4K+, about seven or so years back. Reason was to be able to have horizontal battens I think. Advancing in years, he found that it was hard work raising sail and changed back to in mast.
 
Slab reefing with all lines lead back. I can put in or take out a slab in less than a minute in any conditions and on any point of sail.
 
Slab reefing with all lines lead back. I can put in or take out a slab in less than a minute in any conditions and on any point of sail.

+1

Although on bigger boats I don't think there's anything wrong with having the lines at the mast either.

Pete
 
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