Richard Brooksby wrote:
I managed to sail for a couple of hours today in Portsmouth Harbour with the new mast rake, but there was only a F3 wind and it wasn't very consistent, so I can't really draw any conclusions yet. That will have to wait until I can make some longer tacks. Hopefully soon.
I sailed some longer tracks today between Portsmouth and Ryde, just as I did earlier in this thread when testing rigging the sail far forward.
Here's my track. The wind was again westerly F4/5 this time with a lee bow tide, which shouldn't affect the test. Sea state was slight as before, with white horses.
The sail was rigged as standard, but with the mast rake it likes to hang forward to the extent it can within the parrels. I'd estimate it was about 20% forward whereas I tested 25% forward before. So that's about 5% less sail forward but just under 5° forward rake.
The performance was similar to the first test with the sail tied forward. That is, an improvement on the factory position. I made 4kt with the self-steering set at about 65° off once I had things trimmed, and up to 4.5kt in gusts. Heeling was 15-20°. There was still weather helm similar to before.
But the single biggest improvement came on the second two tacks when I halved the top triangle, giving me a consistent 4.5kt and less weather helm. By contrast, reefing a bottom panel just slowed me to 3.5kt.
It seems that reducing the top triangle is a real winner.
The good news is there was no longer any reluctance to tack. In fact, she went round better than ever. So that's a win for rake.
Hauling the sail back immediately lost me about 1kt. I turned my upper luff hauling parrel into a general luff hauling parrel to test this.
So rake has duplicated the improvement of tying the sail forward, but without the disadvantages. Good.