A junk rig for Weaverbird

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  • 10 Mar 2016 20:14
    Reply # 3873602 on 3858224
    Yo! That sounds pretty good, David.  I assume you're happy with 3mm wall thickness? - it seems a bit light on.  Is it because the Duette is so light that you can get away with it?
  • 10 Mar 2016 16:47
    Reply # 3873242 on 3858224

    I'm in contact with Michelle Thomas at the Aluminium Lighting Company, tel. 01639 852502, and it looks as though I can get a bare conical pole 9.2m long, 165mm diameter parallel for the lower 4m and then tapering to 76mm diameter at the top, with a wall thickness of 3mm. The alloy is 6063T6. I'll be able to adapt the sailplan to fit onto this length of mast. I'm waiting for a quotation.

  • 03 Mar 2016 11:57
    Reply # 3858412 on 3858224
    This design is so radical that I'm lost for words David, but it's great to see you aren't going to get landlocked. I imagine Weaver Bird will sprout all kinds of weird and wonderful rigs in future, advancing junk rig knowledge for those of us who merely stand in awe.
  • 03 Mar 2016 10:31
    Message # 3858224

    I've uploaded my first sketch for Weaverbird's conversion from pointy-top to junk.

    The sail is of high AR, 18.95 sq m/204 sq ft, and I'm thinking of Tyvek 1443R material. This is 1524mm wide, and it seems to make sense to have a vertical seam in the middle of each panel, as the sail chord is 2.9m and I can make use of some broadseaming at the mid point.

    The mast is about the same height above deck as the bermudan mast, with a total length of 9.5m. I'm thinking of a diameter at partners of 145mm.

    The battens are 3m long, which turns out to be very convenient, as RBJ Plastics make some high spec carbon tubes of that length, and I feel that if I use very light weight Tyvek for the sail, I should match it with very light weight battens. Might I get away with a one-part halyard, I wonder?

    With this kind of tall narrow sail, I'd be using upper and lower sheets to keep control of the twist.

    Last modified: 10 May 2016 13:09 | Anonymous member
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       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
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