thinwater
Well-Known Member
I think we may be talking about two completely different phenomenon: Yawing caused by windage/lateral plain imbalance, like the fluttering of a flag. And yawing caused by abrupt changes in wind direction, typically when anchored near headlands. Very different.
I maintain that true slack in the first case is probably near impossible, or at least very rare. The physics don't suport it. It is also the case I have tested. The second case is open ended, and I would would almost certainly have two anchors down, which will prevent snatching. Since the mid-Atlantic coast has very few areas with headlands subject to abrupt wind changes (only thunderstorms), I have little expereince with this case and was not talking about it.
We really need to define two cases of yawing, and talk about them one at a time, since the causes and solutions are very different. As Neeves, a riding sail helps one but could make the other worse. But a drogue at the bow, for example, should help in both cases.
I maintain that true slack in the first case is probably near impossible, or at least very rare. The physics don't suport it. It is also the case I have tested. The second case is open ended, and I would would almost certainly have two anchors down, which will prevent snatching. Since the mid-Atlantic coast has very few areas with headlands subject to abrupt wind changes (only thunderstorms), I have little expereince with this case and was not talking about it.
We really need to define two cases of yawing, and talk about them one at a time, since the causes and solutions are very different. As Neeves, a riding sail helps one but could make the other worse. But a drogue at the bow, for example, should help in both cases.
