joe17
Well-Known Member
I have a 22 ft, fractional rigged, fin keeled boat.
Yesterday I was sailing to windward in 10 or 11 m/s wind (21 knots?). It felt great sailing, but I had was feeling the boat was on the edge (... of what I was comfortable with).
I was wondering what my next step would be in reducing sail if the wind increased further.
Does anyone have any other advice for what would be next step to depower the rig?
I had :
the one and only reef in the main.
the main halyard tight.
the main sheet hard in.
the traveller to leeward.
the jib halyard tight
the jib sheet hard in.
the back stay tight (although I wondered if that made much difference with a reef in?)
the jib was hard in and therefore causing the luff of the main to backwind.
the kicker was tight, but I hadnt done anything with that - should i?
The boat doesnt have a cunningham rigged, but the main does have a cringle in the right place - would that make any different?
I was thinking my next option would be to :
a) drop the main and continue under jib alone. I had a feeling that would be comfortable, but I would loose speed.
b) drop the jib - main alone is not the best setup for windward? And the main wouldnt be depowered by the backwinding from jib.
c) swap the job for the storm jib. That would reduce overall sail, and again wouldnt backwind the main.
Any advice what you would do next to depower the rig?
Thanks,
Joe
Yesterday I was sailing to windward in 10 or 11 m/s wind (21 knots?). It felt great sailing, but I had was feeling the boat was on the edge (... of what I was comfortable with).
I was wondering what my next step would be in reducing sail if the wind increased further.
Does anyone have any other advice for what would be next step to depower the rig?
I had :
the one and only reef in the main.
the main halyard tight.
the main sheet hard in.
the traveller to leeward.
the jib halyard tight
the jib sheet hard in.
the back stay tight (although I wondered if that made much difference with a reef in?)
the jib was hard in and therefore causing the luff of the main to backwind.
the kicker was tight, but I hadnt done anything with that - should i?
The boat doesnt have a cunningham rigged, but the main does have a cringle in the right place - would that make any different?
I was thinking my next option would be to :
a) drop the main and continue under jib alone. I had a feeling that would be comfortable, but I would loose speed.
b) drop the jib - main alone is not the best setup for windward? And the main wouldnt be depowered by the backwinding from jib.
c) swap the job for the storm jib. That would reduce overall sail, and again wouldnt backwind the main.
Any advice what you would do next to depower the rig?
Thanks,
Joe