Good tip on the wheel marks. We do similar on Touche'. I have a 36 inch wheel
that is used only for racing. Normally, I use a 32. We use tape, green for
TDC, yellow for ~2 degrees, red for ~4. When the main trimmer sees the red
tape stripe at the top he eases the traveler.
A "visual" boat is easier. We have a Navtec hydraulic backstay. I taped a
small batten to the cylinder so it extends upward several inches to the head of
the ram. On it are green, yellow, red and black tape marks. We adjust the
backstay to the desired headstay sag then remember the color where the head of
the ram is. Easier than looking at the pressure gauge.
Dennis C.
Touche' 35-1 #83
Mandeville, LA
>________________________________
> From: allen <allenmi...@earthlink.net>
>To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
>Sent: Friday, November 22, 2013 7:36 AM
>Subject: Re: Stus-List 30 MKI weather helm
>
>
>
>Rob,
>
>I have sailed Septima for nearly 20 years, in
all kinds of wind and sea conditions, racing and cruising. Some lessons
learned.
> * Sail her flat, no more than 18 degrees heel. We have inclinometers
> on the back head and the helm and trimmers work to keep her in range.
> * Check your sails. If they're old, they're too baggy, you're gonna
> heel. We have low stretch racings sails. Lowered our weight aloft a lot
> and they don't let the draft come aft as the wind picks up.
> * Useful tools: hydraulic backstay adjuster, bridge deck mounted
> traveler with a windward adjustable car, cockpit adjustable genoa cars,
> powerful cunningham.
> * Tune your rig with the mast raked 10 to 12 inches.
> * You sail a 30-2, with its broad beam carried so far aft, differently
> than the older designs. We actually steer Septima with the main because the
> main trimmer has the windward car and is sitting on the side deck in front
> of the helm where they can communicate easily.
> * Our wheel in marked each side of TDC with a seam that indicates 4
> degrees of rudder. Helm puts the appropriate seam TDC, trimmers trim the
> sails, and, as the boat gathers speed along the course line, helm relays to
> main trimmer whether helm is light or heavy. Main is retrimmed using the
> traveler only. Object: keep the foils moving thru the water at 4 degree
> incidence angle and keep heel 15 to 18 degrees.
> * As wind speed picks up. use sail controls to keep things in balance.
> More backstay pressure, halyard tension, aft movement of genoa cars as
> needed for headsail; more cunningham, traveler to leeward, twist off the
> leach for the main.
>All these actions keep the boat balanced, fast and
stable. I have never had the rudder stall. Its always at 4 degrees
incidence. Can help to move crew weight aft as wind really picks up.
It's not rocket science.
>
>Allen Miles
>S/V Septima
>Hampton, VA
>
>Oh yes, I was a rocket scientist.
>
>
>
>
>From: Robert Gallagher
>Sent: Friday, November 22, 2013 1:29 AM
>To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
>Subject: Stus-List 30 MKI weather helm
>
>
>My 30MKI had the mast raked back and the rigging on the tight side.
Weather helm yes, it could be a bear. Round ups never. I could bury the
rail deep and just keep plowing along.
>My 30MKII's rudder will stall then round up out of control with to
much sail up and not enough tension on the backstay. Too much heel and it
gets scary.
>All that being said im still learning on my MKII
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