flaming
Well-Known Member
Depends what you call noticeable... Certainly I know about it if it's wrong....I doubt if there would be noticeable difference between parallel rudders or toe in / out. Just adjust so rudders parallel after setting the rudder with the feed back to straight ahead and matching the other to it by tie bar (track rod ) adjustment.
Thinking about it some more from a cruising perspective, what I think I'd do is to tune for about 10-15 degrees of heel. So go out on a nice day with flatish water and a nice F3-4. Sail the boat on a reach with circa 15 degrees of heel, then tune the toe in so that the windward rudder has even flow on both sides.
This will give the best performance on reaching and lightish wind upwind sailing. As the wind builds upwind you should find the windward rudder moslty out of the water, so no big deal. This should mean your only point of really less than optimal would be downwind flat boat sailing. Which is probably the trade off I'd take for cruising as on a reach you can find the helm loading up if pressed, which this should help with. But downwind you will only really have a slight increase in drag to contend with, not any adverse handling characteristics.