Compliment on the junk rig

  • 23 Dec 2014 05:02
    Reply # 3174810 on 3173400
    Deleted user
    Annie Hill wrote:
    Gary King wrote:

    Looks like a another compliment for Arne’s cambered sail design.

    And your execution of said design.  Plus your abilities on the helm :-)
    Yes, well, I find letting out the foresail and pulling the helm to weather (and lashed) to compensate usually increases the speed, which I reckon reduces the leeway, because watching the chart plotter the real course drifts back closer on the wind, to what is was before without weather helm, but is a full knot faster. With the main sheeted in hard and the foresail boom outside the lifelines, can get about 45˚ off apparent.

    Just sheeting everything in hard and pointing the bow as close as possible without luffing is not the way on this boat, the leeway defeats you. Couldn't figure this out without a chart plotter either.

    Last modified: 23 Dec 2014 05:02 | Deleted user
  • 23 Dec 2014 02:35
    Reply # 3174725 on 3174595
    Gary King wrote:
    Gary Pick wrote:

    We may well meet up yet.:-)

    Certainly can. We're a little held by a fresh bout of SE'lies, just outside Cairns. May take awhile to get to NSW.
    No hurry, I'm sure there's plenty to see between you and me.:)
  • 22 Dec 2014 22:29
    Reply # 3174595 on 3174186
    Deleted user
    Gary Pick wrote:

    We may well meet up yet.:-)

    Certainly can. We're a little held up by a fresh bout of SE'lies, just outside Cairns. May take awhile to get to NSW.
    Last modified: 23 Dec 2014 03:14 | Deleted user
  • 22 Dec 2014 11:07
    Reply # 3174186 on 3173339

    We may well meet up yet.:-)

  • 20 Dec 2014 01:43
    Reply # 3173400 on 3173339
    Gary King wrote:

    Looks like a another compliment for Arne’s cambered sail design.

    And your execution of said design.  Plus your abilities on the helm :-)
  • 19 Dec 2014 22:54
    Message # 3173339
    Deleted user

    Ashiki is cruising the “top end” of Australia where the winds are quite placid, not much high speed reaching along like on the west coast anyway. Sails are almost always fully raised, we spend most our time at 2 to 3 knots, and almost always to windward. I don’t know how we compare anymore as all the bermudan boats we encounter motorsail. We seem to be the slowest boat up here, we only motor in calms, and not for long. Last week we were beating to windward to round Cape Flattery (far North Queensland) and going at a reasonable clip for a change, 3 to 3.8 knots and, shock horror noticed we were getting overhauled by another yacht (shock more for the fact other sailing boats are few are far between up here). Looked to be a racer with full crew on a parallel course about 1/2 mile away, they eventually left us for dead.

    Fast forward to Port Douglas, we’re dinghying away from the yacht club and a guy in another dinghy asks us if we’re from the “junk rig schooner”. Then say’s he was on that yacht passing us at Cape Flattery. Yep, you guys thrashed us, I told him. On the contrary, he says they have encountered junk rigged boats before and said, we were really “trucking” and took ages to catch us. And they noticed how close to the wind we were “trucking” which really surprised them.

    By way of explanation, I told him the panels of our sails were cut to foil shapes, like any sail is supposed to be, and older junks had flat sails. He seemed to get that right away.

    Looks like a another compliment for Arne’s cambered sail design.

    Last modified: 22 Dec 2014 22:31 | Deleted user
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