Ric
Well-Known Member
I have a slutter rig on a 10m boat. The Genoa is 130%, and the staysail is just around 10% smaller than the main.
I have been experimenting with the best downwind rig - goose winged or twin poled out headsails. The twin poled out headsails has slightly less area, but I like it better because it the boat rolls less due to centre of pressure being further forward (I think!).
However, should I be worried about mast compression? The Genoa is just on a single halyard and furler, but the staysail is on a continuous line furler with a dyneema halyard, passing through a block on the head, then back up to the top of the mast, to tension up the luff line. The tension in the dyneema is quite substantial. I thus have five lines compressing the mast instead of the two that the structure was designed for. I don't have backstays, but the staysail is mounted very high on the mast.
I am supposing that the mast has enough structural redundancy to cope with the additional loads but I am not a rigger.
I have been experimenting with the best downwind rig - goose winged or twin poled out headsails. The twin poled out headsails has slightly less area, but I like it better because it the boat rolls less due to centre of pressure being further forward (I think!).
However, should I be worried about mast compression? The Genoa is just on a single halyard and furler, but the staysail is on a continuous line furler with a dyneema halyard, passing through a block on the head, then back up to the top of the mast, to tension up the luff line. The tension in the dyneema is quite substantial. I thus have five lines compressing the mast instead of the two that the structure was designed for. I don't have backstays, but the staysail is mounted very high on the mast.
I am supposing that the mast has enough structural redundancy to cope with the additional loads but I am not a rigger.