FairweatherDave
Well-Known Member
Caused myself and crew a few problems yesterday. Approaching West Pole in a force 4 to 5 and lumpy following sea I had rigged a pole on the genoa and and a boom preventer to goosewing pretty much direct from Seaview. My preventer is simply a line fixed mid boom to midship cleat with an OXO.
MY plan was to turn onto a broad reach to enter Chichester by gybing the boat and slowly easing the mainsail accross using the preventer. Bad plan. I went up to the midship cleat and requested the helm to gybe. But I could not release the OXO with the way the line went up to the boom. Now we were on a reach with the boom on the wrong side, mainsail fully powered up. I would guess we had broached as the helm could not correct course at all. A little bit of reading around suggests we had headed up and were "pinned". Situation only rectified once we were able to get back more on a run and release the preventer.
In the circumstances what should I have done? Either remove the preventer in advance and then gybe the main. Or have a much improved preventer using some form of block attached to the midship cleat. Ideally with the line back to the cockpit too.
As an aside our mainsheet fixes at the end of the boom to the stern and can take out an unprepared helm in a gybe - so being able to ease the boom across was my intention. With no preventer I would normally centre the boom as far as possible before gybing , and then let out the mainsheet pretty quick once the boom has gone across. But my key question is about rigging a better preventer and if it can be used at all to slow the boom in a gybe.
Boat is a 29ft Westerly Konsort bilge keel. Very aware the wind would increase once no longer on a run but did not need the aggro with the preventer. But the pole and preventer had done a great job in quite a rolly sea up to the West Pole. Still got lots to learn.......
MY plan was to turn onto a broad reach to enter Chichester by gybing the boat and slowly easing the mainsail accross using the preventer. Bad plan. I went up to the midship cleat and requested the helm to gybe. But I could not release the OXO with the way the line went up to the boom. Now we were on a reach with the boom on the wrong side, mainsail fully powered up. I would guess we had broached as the helm could not correct course at all. A little bit of reading around suggests we had headed up and were "pinned". Situation only rectified once we were able to get back more on a run and release the preventer.
In the circumstances what should I have done? Either remove the preventer in advance and then gybe the main. Or have a much improved preventer using some form of block attached to the midship cleat. Ideally with the line back to the cockpit too.
As an aside our mainsheet fixes at the end of the boom to the stern and can take out an unprepared helm in a gybe - so being able to ease the boom across was my intention. With no preventer I would normally centre the boom as far as possible before gybing , and then let out the mainsheet pretty quick once the boom has gone across. But my key question is about rigging a better preventer and if it can be used at all to slow the boom in a gybe.
Boat is a 29ft Westerly Konsort bilge keel. Very aware the wind would increase once no longer on a run but did not need the aggro with the preventer. But the pole and preventer had done a great job in quite a rolly sea up to the West Pole. Still got lots to learn.......