Ketil Greve wrote:
David,
I changed the rudder of Edmond Dantes to a slimmer deeper design from jefa.com in Denmark. The transformation was unbelieveable. I have a plan for changing the rudder of Marie G too.
Ketil.
I can second Ketil’s saying. The new rudder of Edmond Dantes is almost too good. Not only is it very powerful, even at low angles, but it is also so well balanced that ED can be hand-steered for hours, even on a roaring broad reach - which I have done. In fact there is the danger of not sensing the rising wind from behind and end up bending or breaking something in the rig. Last summer this happened to the owner, Håvard: He reported that he was doing «between 6 and 8 knots». It is just that it takes A LOT of brute force to even approach 8kts in ED - so in the evening he reported that batten 2 (from top) - the one which is twice as strong as the others - had bent.
The thing is that the Chinese had/have a very different view on what the rudder is made for. Their centre-boards are usually positioned well forward of the wanted position of the CLR. The rudder then work as centre-board number two - in addition to steering the boat. The Chinese would never run out of rudder and I cannot see any signs that they used to shift their mainsails either (Hong Kong schooners ).
I am not against shifting the junk sail back and forth, but I guess I regard it as a plan B. If I can choose, I will rather go for a boat with a powerful rudder. Several of us do fine without needing to shift their lo-AR sloop sails; Edmond Dantes, Johanna, Frøken Sørensen and Fantail, among (hopefully) others. For those of you who have boats with a shallow, inferior rudder, I recommend that you add a generous endplate to it. That is a quick-fix that really works.
Cheers,
Arne