Need more info but at first glance, just ease the main.  Helm should  ease up 
and allow you more control.  Sheet in when the breeze comes off a  bit.  
 
 
In a message dated 7/24/2008 4:48:39 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:


Judy ... 

I have tried and tried to get my '86 tall rig to  balance ... "two fingers on 
the tiller" as you put it. Right now, the mast is  straight up and down, 
which is about six inches further forward than I was  told to start. At 
anything 
past 10 degrees heel angle, I'm holding on, and  past 15 degress heel angle I'm 
starting to fight rounding up. At .20 degress,  all efficiency is gone and 
I'm dragging a tiller through the water. Bottom is  clean, and I don't know 
what 
else to do. Ideas? 

Tom 





"Judith Blumhorst, DC"  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Sent by: [email protected]  
07/18/2008 05:08 PM      
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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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