chrisedwards
Well-Known Member
You are right - this is the most important reason for me having an unstayed mast - you can let the sails out past athwartships and the boat stays stationery. It allows you to do more manoeuvres under sail which is what sailing is all about for me.
For cruising I think Chris Edwards has listed most of the well accepted advantages...
Here's a couple more.. Gybing less stressful, less slam imparted into the structure
A tapered mast feathers off in gusts, which can be a good thing as opposed to flattening everything hard hard in with a stayed equivalent.. Not always but hey...
And , my favourite.. No bloody shrouds to chafe the main against..
Corribee ( my experience) the unstayed mast when redesigned came through the forehatch ( or was encouraged to by elongating the rudder Skeg too) so structurally a very easy one.
And I climbed it too, boat never capsized nor snapped off...
And ( ok bit of a smartarise here) I rigged a forsa with a rigid forestay that precluded putting the freestanding mast in compression... Anything can be done, it just takes a bit of ingenuity and lateral thinking..
But for banging upwind against the trades( who really really does much of that eh?), posh fore sails and big diesels are the way to go ( quicker).