Tomahawk
Well-Known Member
We always sail flat.
And fast..
10 kts is ptetty standard...
And fast..
10 kts is ptetty standard...
Windermere 17 ft Class yachts use the extra LWL to gain speed. Over the 100 years they have tried everything (within the rules) but the fleet is always heeled over.
Another of the 17ft class rules is that they are not allowed to reef.
Put simplistically the more a yacht heels the closer the keel is to its max effectiveness (90 degrees) and the more the effect of the leeward side of the hull being submerged and so the centre of buoyancy shifting away from the centreline. At the same time the power of the sails decreases as the boat heels, so at some point the two graphs cross and you have your optimum heel.
D'you think I should grind off the other rivets then use a vice to 'bend' them into symmetry?
Stuff-in a big gust, point up a bit. Keep the boat driving but point higher than you would normally. Head back down after the gust. Probably not going to work that well with a baggy reefed jib.
Enjoy
Be ready for it by all means, but easy the sails as the gust hits, not before. You'll lose speed and pointing, and when the gust arrives it will seem harsher if the boat's not already in the groove.Let sails out in anticipation to keep boat flat...
Why? Just when you are trying to dump power you are bearing away and powering the boat up. You are also loosing height. You bear away going downwind, not upwind!when gust hits then bear away down the gust holding it for as long as possible...
So how does that work then? Increased boat speed = apparent wind moving forward. When the apparent wind moves forward, you have to bear away to compensate otherwise your sails start to stall because you are now pointing too high. This may not be that obvious in a Wayfarer, but trust me in a 49er it's very obvious indeed.Use boat speed at end of gust to point higher...
Nope. Going upwind, other way around. Going up in a lull dumps your crew in the water. Especially true for a twin wire skiff, but also very applicable to a single wire boat with the crew flat wiring.Up in the lulls bear away in the gusts...
Sounds a bit like my "keep the boat driving but point higher than you would normally" technique......"flobbling" the tiller to keep boat speed but ease up to point high without loosing boat speed
Clear wind is also essential and you get disturbed air often up to 14 boat lengths downwind of another boat
Some of them don't seem to use the traveller
![]()
Upwind performance is about maximum righting moment combined with power available.
In dinghies this is normally when the boat is flat, or with minimal heel and the crew hiking / trapesing hard. .....