Meant to put this as an aside on Sam's thread.  New main and #1 on
Koobalibra C&C115 this past summer.  The difference between these and
the 6 year old sails is like high tech winter tires to bald tires in a
snow storm ....

________________________________

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of
sam.c.sal...@gmail.com
Sent: Tuesday, December 03, 2013 12:58 AM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Stus-List Halyard Tension


Reading the tread about halyards, and an earlier post about furlers
reminded me to ask a question of you racers out there: -

I don't race - only because there's no-one racing on our lake. Although
I have done a couple of Swiftsures.
But I like passing boats and hate it when boats pass me!
My boat has been pretty well upgraded with all rope halyards; new
adjustable genoa cars; self tailers; new traveller; barbour haulers; and
new Dacron sails 5 seasons ago.
I sail with a 135% genoa on a furler. While sailing I adjust the genoa
halyard regularly to move draft in the sail as the wind changes. (I do
the same with the main too!)
Now the question:
Late this season I bought a new high tech, Kevlar, carbon, kryptonite,
135% genoa.
I'm assuming I don't adjust halyard tension with this new sail as I
don't think the sail will distort like a Dacron sail.
Similarly, when I buy a matching main, main halyard and Cunningham
adjustment will become redundant. Am I correct with this assumption?
If this is correct, are there any trimming adjustments with these new
high tech sails that I should become familiar with? Do you trim these
newer sails any different than the old Dacron sails?
What new techniques do I need to absorb?
Thanks,
sam :-)
C&C 26  Liquorice
Ghost Lake  Alberta.

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