Elbows
Well-Known Member
This was a bit of a tangent on another thread, but I think it warrants a thread of it's own.
My mainsail luff rope has shrunk and I was planning on unpicking the bottom end and reattaching it a bit higher up to allow the sail to be tensioned properly. But that set me to wondering whether it was actually doing anything useful anyway as the sail is fitted with sliders.
I've been told that it's there to prevent over-tensioning of the the sail fabric, but that only works when the sail isn't reefed. When it's reefed the bottom end isn't anchored at the new tack so the full tension of the halyard is taken by the sail cloth anyway. If it doesn't matter when reefed, why would it matter when not reefed? Is there some other reason it's there that I haven't thought of?
My mainsail luff rope has shrunk and I was planning on unpicking the bottom end and reattaching it a bit higher up to allow the sail to be tensioned properly. But that set me to wondering whether it was actually doing anything useful anyway as the sail is fitted with sliders.
I've been told that it's there to prevent over-tensioning of the the sail fabric, but that only works when the sail isn't reefed. When it's reefed the bottom end isn't anchored at the new tack so the full tension of the halyard is taken by the sail cloth anyway. If it doesn't matter when reefed, why would it matter when not reefed? Is there some other reason it's there that I haven't thought of?