Gary and David Th.
this is very interesting reading! It tells a lot about how important the character of the hull is for the total impression under sail.
My present boat, Frøken Sørensen has wide beam, a sharp bow, long waterline (lwl=6.3m on loa of 6.5m, and beam= 2.4m), a simple flat cb, a huge perfectly streamlined rudder - and no ballast. The fact that her top speed is 5.1knots with a 2.3hp Honda, says something (rudder and cb fully down).
I have found that she is the best boat to windward of all my boats, so far. The sail, with only 8% camber does not let me sheet it in much more than I used to with a flat sail (8% camber is moderate compared to that on many staysails).
FS’ has a one-finger-light weather helm when sailing close-hauled and it lets me “feel my way” upwind. This summer’s sailing (27 outings so far) has shown that she can point higher than all boats (up to 7.5m) that I have met. If the seastate allows, I now generally tack inside 90° on the compass. Her maximum speed will then generally be between 4.5 and 4.8knots. That will only give a vmg of around 3.0knots, but after all, we are talking about a small boat of 21ft. Length counts a lot when going to windward.
David points out that his boat is slower (upwind only?) with the mast to windward, on the supposedly “good tack”. This confirms my own feeling.
I believe this can have two reasons: The parasitic drag of the mast to windward does more harm than the distorted camber one gets on the other tack. Another possible factor is that we may tend to over-sheet the sail on the “good tack”: On this tack, the battens of my sail, fly about 10cm away from the mast. This increases the total offset of the sail, so the sheeting point on deck may needs to be shifted further out than originally planned.
On FS the sheeting point is far out - it was just an existing ring which I made use of. Last year I thought that its offset was too far, so I adjusted the sheet at each tack. This year I just leave the sheet as it is when tacking, and FS now picks up speed much better on the sb. tack. Whether we point higher on one tack than the other, I am not so sure any more. The thin aluminium mast must produce much less drag than the thicker wooden masts did.
Finally, I don’t cant the sail when running before, but rely on FS’ superb rudder. My advice to anyone with a shallow rudder is to add endplates to its lower end.
Cheers, Arne