Keith ... so, when I've had a 135 or 150 or some such up, I have a 
"bubble" in toward the leach of the main, even with it centered, telltales 
flying correctly, and flattened out pretty good. I take this as backwind 
off the genoa. So if I let go the backstay and allow the forestay to sag 
off, I'm thinking that opens up the slot a bit and maybe fixes the main? 
And will that affect my ability to point?

Tom






"Sneddon, Keith" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
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08/27/2007 01:39 PM
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RE: catalina27-talk: a whole week!






I agree with Tom on most of this, except; on mast head rigs (like a C27), 
the backstay adjuster is mostly to adjust the sag of the forestay, which 
influences the width of the “slot” between the headsail and mainsail, 
whereas on a fractional rig (like most J- Boats), the backstay adjuster 
will really bend the upper tip of the mast aft, particularly if the mast 
section is tapered up high. The difference is that, on a masthead rig, the 
forestay directly resists the backstay tension, and on a fractional rig, 
it reacts the force of the backstay from a lower attachment point, which 
bends the mast.
 
Keith Sneddon
#4760 “Are We There Yet?”

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, August 27, 2007 2:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: catalina27-talk: a whole week!
 

We really need Tim or Chris or Phil or someone to comment on this, but ... 


I don't think you can really get a C27 mast to curve by adding tension to 
the backstay adjuster. The thing is just too think an extrusion. My 
understanding, which has undoubtedly has as much opportunity to be wrong 
as yours, is that rake and backstay do two different things. 

Rake adjusts the turning moment of the sail combination to the turning 
moment of the hull. It's kind of a dynamic thing since the turning moment 
of the hull changes with healing, and the turning moment of the sails 
changes with what sails you have up and how they are trimmed. So you're 
trying to hit an average. 

The idea of using the backstay adjuster to bend the top part of the mast 
backwards is to change the shape of the main. Why you do that and what it 
accomplishes I'll leave to others. 

Tom 







"Joe McCary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
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08/27/2007 12:19 PM 


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Well, Tom, You asked for a week to take you mind off other things as well 
as your tie.  So you can’t complain except for the shredding bimini and 
sail cover. 
  
I am glad your mast rake has helped your performance.  I am wondering 
along the same lines if using the adjustable backstay adjuster if it has 
some of the same effects?  Going to weather my understanding is to add on 
more backstay tension (moving the mast aft and adding weather helm) and 
when off the wind to release tension.  To me this seems counter intuitive 
and backwards.  Am I wrong (would not be the first time)? 
  
Joe McCary 
Aeolus II #4795 
West River, MD 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Well, for a midwest August it was sure a windy week. Couldn't even sail 
Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday I was rail down at hull speed with just a 
working jib up. Thursday I actually used the main. Friday a storm came 
through and shreaded my bimini and main sail cover at the dock. Weekend 
was back to typical August sailing ... i.e., hot and slow. 

Re a previous post on mast rake ... I finally got the opportunity to 
retune the mast. Pulled it forward a good bit, and she sure sails a lot 
better. I think I need to go another inch, but till I can get out in 
conditions where I'm healed at 15-20 degrees with BOTH a main and jib, I 
can't really tell. 

It's been a funny midwest season. I bought a new 135 this year so I could 
sail better in light air. It's been up twice. I've mostly been using an 
old working jib, and often a reefed main. 

Tom 
6219 Different Drummer 

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