I found that my boat sails better with more fore sail when gusting than main as 
for Phil and Judy I was sailing out of Oyster point great heading out but 
coming in was not so fun 
Sorry if there are any typo's I broke a couple of fingers today!
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: catalina27-talk: Yesterdays sail
Date: Fri, 18 Jul 2008 18:08:21 -0700



















I was hoping you’d be on line for
this one. There nothing like a SF Bay C27TR sailor to answer Tom’s
original question. On SF Bay you either learn or get thrashed daily.

 





Phil 

 





-----Original Message-----

From:
[email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Judith 
Blumhorst, DC

Sent: Friday, July 18, 2008 4:36 PM

To:
[email protected]

Subject: Re: catalina27-talk:
Yesterdays sail

 





oops. I meant "Phil A", not "Paul
A"!





 





I wrote:





 





"Like Paul A says, when it's gusty and there's
chop,  you want to shape the sails for acceleration, not speed.  I
loosen the halyard/cunningham to put a rounded entry in
the mainsail so it has a wider range of angle of attack without
stalling, and it accelerates faster.  "





Other notes:





When in chop and gusts, the boat speeds up and slows
down alot, so I want to trim your sails for acceleration over a wide range
of true and apparent wind speeds.  I want a rounded entry near the
luff , not a fine one, and twist in the upper half of the sail. 
Somebody already described how to twist off the mainsail by letting the boom
rise up vertically (move the traveller up high (windward) and ease the
mainsheet, with the vang loosened)





Trimming the jib: put twist in the head of the ib
by moving the sheet block aft.  That depowers the top of the sail and
provides acceleration over a wider range of windspeeds in the
gusts.  Also, I move the draft in the jib an inch or two forward
(to round the entry) by slightly tightening the halyard to tighten the
luff (and keep the forestay tight when beating upwind.) -- that also
provides better acceleration in varying wind speeds and boat speeds (like
getting walloped by chop)  Keeping the forestay makes the draft in the jib
relatively shallower, which also reduces power.





 





Gotta go take the little'un swimming....  it's 90
degrees here and blowing about 20 mph in my back yard  (I'm 20
miles inland from the SF Bay)





 





Judy B





Sailing San Francisco Bay in high
winds, and lottsa lumpy water





1977 Tall rig, "Bijou"





http://www.blumhorst.com/





 





 





-----
Original Message ----

From: "Judith Blumhorst, DC" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: [email protected]

Sent: Friday, July 18, 2008 3:08:14 PM

Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Yesterdays sail







Hi all,





 





I sail in 20-25-30 knots all the time.  Got
a tall rig with that giant foretriangle, and roller furler.   Rear
traveller and tiller.   Most of the time, I've got a 95% jib
on.  That's roughly equivalent to a 110% on a regular rig. 
She's fine with that from about 10 to 35 knots with the 95%
jib.   As the wind builds and if it's gusty (which it always is
here), we twist off the jib and mainsail first if it's gusty, then 1st reef, 
then
take a 2nd reef.  





 





Her rig is tuned so that I can control her with
just 2 fingers on the tiller.  Putting a lot of twist in both the jib and
the mainsail and playing the traveller takes care of heeling in the gusts most
of the time.   





 





Like Paul A says, when it's gusty and there's
chop,  you want to shape the sails for acceleration, not speed.  I
loosen the halyard/cunningham to put a rounded entry in
the mainsail so they have a wider range of angle of attack without
stalling, and they accelerate faster.  





 





For the off-season in the winter (winds from 0-15), we
use a 135% on a roller furler.  That's equivalent to a 150% on a regular
rig.  We typically furl going up wind in anything over 12-15 knots, and
maybe let it out going downwind.  Sometimes we've got it up in higher winds
and let it out all the way going downwind.  It's a hoot going downwind in
20 knots on swells, and there's a danger of broaching -- but it's
exhilerating .  but I wouldn't want to try beating upwind with it!





 





We don't race.  We double hand.  We're
lazy, but pretty fast.  





 





Judy B

















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