Robert Wilson
Well-Known Member
Thanks Concerto. I'll try it when my old girl is back in the water.
(Ohhh yeah !!)
(Ohhh yeah !!)
In basic terms for upwind and close reaching you should be setting the backstay up for the conditions, for a cruiser I would set yourself 3 marks as reference, sub 10knots, 10-16, 16+, allowing your to have a small amount of headstay sag in those conditions. Doing this and adjusting it for the conditons will mean the boat is much more efficient, less heeling with more speed!
I'm sorry, but am I being thick?
Tensioning the backstay surely tensions the headstay as well? (masthead rig).
If I am being thick, you are welcome to comment :encouragement:
I remember another 36 ft race boat who set a taught line with a small central weight from bow to stern and then tensioned the backstay. The line dropped by an inch in the middle,
Dingo??
Well guessed.
A lot of people mistakenly think that tightening the backstay of a masthead rig boat won't bend the mast, it will.

with this set upIf the lower part of the mast is held fore & aft by opposing lowers then when the backstay is tightened against a slackish fore stay it will pull the mast tip aft thus bending the mast. This can have the benefit of flattening the mainsail so that reefing can be delayed a little, if coupled with other tweeksHi Savageseadog,
Forgive me as I have a limited understanding of rigging but I was under the impression that with a masthead rig tightening the backstay could not bend the mast at all.
Not really. I think Dingo was designed for the 3/4 ton level rating series. I sailed with the owner, Bob Stewart, father of Andrew, the designer of the Limbo's
Bob told me how the designer (forgotten who it was) got them to string the line through the boat then tighten the rigging up as much as they could whilst he measured the deflection. As far as I recall he actually only did it the once to see how his design coped with the stresses of the rig. A rumour that they did it to check tension etc each race was not actually, true but bandied about for bar room punditry for the competition
Bob Miller was the designer. Raced against Bob Stewart and sons Rob and Andrew. Not friends of mine, but I will say no more in public forum.
Those were the days when EAORA would get entries in the 100's & fill the harbour in Ostend from pontoon to pontoon so you could walk right across from one side to the other on boats. I know because I did it once after a few beers:encouragement: ( which I then deposited in the N sea on the way home:ambivalence![]()
Those were the days when EAORA would get entries in the 100's & fill the harbour in Ostend from pontoon to pontoon so you could walk right across from one side to the other on boats. I know because I did it once after a few beers:encouragement: ( which I then deposited in the N sea on the way home:ambivalence![]()
Those were certainly the good old days of EAORA. The fun continued when boats wanted to leave and cast blocks of boats off and left it for others to winch them back into the raft. The best result we had in the Harwich Ostend was a 2nd overall, just pipped by Richard Matthews, but we way clear of the rest of the fleet.
Do you remember Dione and the other classic yachts that joined the fun. Once Dione's crew had been drinking in a bar most of the night and returned with the house band to play on the quayside and the owners children went round with caps begging for money to maintain Dione! Not that he needed any as he ran a string of nightclubs.
Sorry about the thread drift.
Hi Savageseadog,
Forgive me as I have a limited understanding of rigging but I was under the impression that with a masthead rig tightening the backstay could not bend the mast at all. I had once a fractional rig and could understand the physics how a mast could be bent and to some extent why.
I just cant see how a masthead rig could be bent by using the backstay. surely any tension/force would would compress the mast? My current boat is a fractional rig but has jumper stays, so a little more confusedView attachment 70177View attachment 70177 with this set up
seams I'm having a problem adding images as well!!
Steveeasy
Imagine you're pushing on the top of a vertical straw. The mast isn't a perfectly vertical column, there will be loading from the boom and main. The sheeted main will tend to bend the mast out of column and enable the force applied to induce bend into the mast.