Mark Thomasson wrote:
Dear Dave
if I can draw on a miss-spent youth of windsurfing - where the power of the sail is immediately felt:
- Blocking the gap between the base of the sail and the board was like turning on a turbo. I see you have a big gap between boom and deck, so suggest try fitting a 'water sail' for light winds.
Thanks for the suggestion, Mark, that would be a sight easier than flying another shaped sail (such as a genoa)! Be an easy way to experiment with a cambered panel, too!
A question for more experienced junkies - is your crab-claw top panel a benefit. Experiment with a 'normal' triangle, it would give more area. The outcome of interest to us all.
SLACKTIDE's CC top panel, its shape explicitly chosen to approximate certain traditional CC sails, has worked very well for us (can see it on our icon... all our sails have been flat-cut polyester).
LUNA, under two, H&M near-standard upper panels (topmost batten unsheeted, slightly lower than standard yard), had a tendency to overpower the rudder and round us up. Her underbody was about .3M draft with full rocker and leeboardy off-centerboards... tracks very well until overpowered. We felt there was too much area left (anyway) and the CE of each sail was too far aft/outboard when deep-reefed.
SLACKTIDE has a better tracking hull, and the deep hollowed leech in the single unsheeted upper panel moves the CE forward/inboard. Hard to separate out which contributes how much, but the round-ups are gone. Off the wind, the small panels move us right along, while feeling comfortably in hand.
Both sails were able to drive us to windward in sustained 45kts, albeit very slowly (made good) and at wide angles. This was especially surprising under the CC, since the box barge hull isn't known for its windward efficiency. The combination of flat-cut JR and box barge hull get us around surprisingly well, though we dream of faster on the wind.
Dave Z