What is the small outrigger on each side, near the stern, of the VOR boats? It's too small to be for the shrouds and it doesn't appear to be for the runners. Any ideas?
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Just for the spinnaker sheet? Or for the guy too? Are there other boats with these?
They'd be a great place to put a video camera for covering the entire cockpit.
they're A-sail only.
Of course. Makes a lot more sense for asyms. The shape of the foil can be better adjusted. Are they used on any other boats?
I'm assuming there is something in the rules that allows spinnaker poles then because that is basically all they are, a means of poling out one corner of a sail? I'm surprised more and more performance monohulls don't use them, we have to barber haul the jib as soon as we crack off from close hauled although obviously I don't need a pole to do it.See above - they are not legal under RRS so only boats racing in races where that rule is modified can, and I've not heard of any other races that do.
I'm assuming there is something in the rules that allows spinnaker poles then because that is basically all they are, a means of poling out one corner of a sail? I'm surprised more and more performance monohulls don't use them, we have to barber haul the jib as soon as we crack off from close hauled although obviously I don't need a pole to do it.
50.2 Spinnaker Poles; Whisker Poles
Only one spinnaker pole or whisker pole shall be used at a time
except when gybing. When in use, it shall be attached to the foremost
mast.
50.3 Use of Outriggers
(a) No sail shall be sheeted over or through an outrigger, except as
permitted in rule 50.3(b) or 50.3(c). An outrigger is any fitting
or other device so placed that it could exert outward pressure
on a sheet or sail at a point from which, with the boat upright, a
vertical line would fall outside the hull or deck. For the purpose
of this rule, bulwarks, rails and rubbing strakes are not part of
the hull or deck and the following are not outriggers: a
bowsprit used to secure the tack of a sail, a bumkin used to
sheet the boom of a sail, or a boom of a boomed headsail that
requires no adjustment when tacking.
(b) Any sail may be sheeted to or led above a boom that is
regularly used for a sail and is permanently attached to the
mast from which the head of the sail is set.
(c) A headsail may be sheeted or attached at its clew to a spinnaker
pole or whisker pole, provided that a spinnaker is not set.
So Flaming, if I read 50.3(c) correctly there is nothing to stop you using a pole to move the jib sheeting angle outboard whilst close reaching as you wouldn't be using a spinnaker then? I'm not trying to be argumentative here, I'm genuinely interested in finding out why it isn't far more common practice than it appears. I have zero experience racing fast monohulls but I know it's absolutely essential on my F27 otherwise you can't maintain the jib shape and flow through the slot and I would have thought the aerodynamics would be the same regardless of how many hulls you have.
Yes, however the pole has to be attached to the main mast. Which rules out using it for anything overlapping the mast. So a code zero type sail will always be faster.
Outriggers on minis are to give a better angle on the guy controlling the bowsprit.On some minitransat boats I've seen there appears to be something similar. It's normally a hinged device at the widest part of the hull. Is that the same?
Could you do a similar thing with a jockey pole?
Allan
Outriggers on minis are to give a better angle on the guy controlling the bowsprit.
So Flaming, if I read 50.3(c) correctly there is nothing to stop you using a pole to move the jib sheeting angle outboard whilst close reaching as you wouldn't be using a spinnaker then?