sailoppopotamus
Active member
My boat is a Jeanneau Sun Light 30, with a 130% roller genoa. I race under ORC Club non-spinnaker rules. My question is about how to best race downwind.
The ORC certificate states my "gybe angle" as 144 degrees in 6 kts of air and 170 degrees in 8 kts of air (slowly rising with wind speed after that). My usual strategy is to sail as deep as possible without the genoa collapsing -- usually this means sailing at higher angles (150-160 or so) than the 170 degrees off the wind, that the certificate claims to be optimal. My question is whether this is the correct approach. On one hand, the genoa collapsing certainly isn't doing me much good -- on the other hand, I imagine that this is modeled by the VPP so I'm a bit reluctant to outright dismiss the numbers in the certificate and sail higher. I'm also wondering whether I'm completely misinterpreting the gybe angle figure -- could it be assuming that I should be sailing wing-on-wing, at 190 degrees to the wind (i.e. 10 by the lee)?
I've also been wondering whether it would be beneficial to roll up some of the genoa, even in light winds, so that the part of it that is most heavily blanketed by the main sail doesn't weigh down the sail. Is there any merit to this thought?
For the record, the boat does have a spinnaker pole that I could otherwise use to pole out the genoa, but it is not listed in the certificate so it doesn't look like I'm allowed to use it. I will have a symmetric spinnaker for next year's season, as I'm quite aware that this is how displacement boats are meant to go downwind
The ORC certificate states my "gybe angle" as 144 degrees in 6 kts of air and 170 degrees in 8 kts of air (slowly rising with wind speed after that). My usual strategy is to sail as deep as possible without the genoa collapsing -- usually this means sailing at higher angles (150-160 or so) than the 170 degrees off the wind, that the certificate claims to be optimal. My question is whether this is the correct approach. On one hand, the genoa collapsing certainly isn't doing me much good -- on the other hand, I imagine that this is modeled by the VPP so I'm a bit reluctant to outright dismiss the numbers in the certificate and sail higher. I'm also wondering whether I'm completely misinterpreting the gybe angle figure -- could it be assuming that I should be sailing wing-on-wing, at 190 degrees to the wind (i.e. 10 by the lee)?
I've also been wondering whether it would be beneficial to roll up some of the genoa, even in light winds, so that the part of it that is most heavily blanketed by the main sail doesn't weigh down the sail. Is there any merit to this thought?
For the record, the boat does have a spinnaker pole that I could otherwise use to pole out the genoa, but it is not listed in the certificate so it doesn't look like I'm allowed to use it. I will have a symmetric spinnaker for next year's season, as I'm quite aware that this is how displacement boats are meant to go downwind