We,  often sailing in very light wind, just received a 'windseeker' sail.
Haven't tried it yet, because we had 8-10 on Wednesday (and won). The sail
is attached to the tack, hoisted on its own luff rope, and is high cut - out
of spinnaker cloth. It looks exciting. Our 155% genoa is just too heavy to
use in under 5 knots. I hope it results in the one knot of increased speed
mentioned previously, but it cannot be any worse than our heavy all-purpose
155.

 

Gary

30-1

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of schiller
via CnC-List
Sent: Friday, August 5, 2016 7:50 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Cc: schiller <schil...@bloomingdalecom.net>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Finally Won a Race now reaching strut

 

I fully endorse the Drifter suggestion.  We have (as a part of the twenty
something sails that came with Corsair) a 1/2 oz Drifter that will get us a
knot of boat speed for a knot of breeze.  It has to be on the deck when the
true wind hits 8 knots.  We baby this 1971 built sail and it has proven its
worth numerous times.  I even took it with us on the Queen's Cup race and it
kept us going for a while until we were becalmed and had to retire due to
time constraints.

I still have Spankers, Bloopers and staysails hanging in the barn.

Neil Schiller
1970 Redwing 35, Hull #7
(C&C 35, Mark I)
White Lake, Michigan

On 8/5/2016 5:18 PM, Jean-Francois J Rivard via CnC-List wrote:

Hi David, 

Yeah we do it all the time, it's also called a reaching strut. On our boats,
the whisker pole is overkill and kind of too big / heavy anyway.  Since we
only do it in very light winds I just get Nicholas to grab the boat hook,
push the clew out with it, hold it by hand  / prop it on the coach roof. 

It does make a significant difference in 0-4 knot wind as your genny has
some kind of shape as opposed to just hanging half folded up.  Last race
(Nicholas my teenage son was the skipper) and the wind was so slight I was
actually holding the clue by hand (We were on a close reach), this way I had
finer control.. And we walked away from everybody by a good margin at the
slightest puff.  It may not be the ideal angle / shape but it beats the heck
out of hanging like a limp flag.. Our competition said: Man! at the
slightest wheeze of wind you guys left us for dead...

Even better: Get a drifter headsail.. It's basically a genoa made out of .5
- 1.0 oz spinnaker material.. They start pulling at the slightest puff and
are relatively cheap. As long as it fits on your foil or is hanked on your
forestay it counts as a genoa, not a spin. It's on my shopping list for
sails hopefully sooner than later

Also, the boat does really well broad reaching at 148-160 degrees true angle
wing on wing with the whisker pole forward towards the forestay kind of like
reaching with a conventional spinnaker.  This way you're wing on wing but
have a speed advantage compared to DD by being at very advantageous angle
from a Polars standpoint.  As long as it does not take you too far of course
to get to your mark that's a good way to go as well.  Good for very slight
winds too.


Good luck,

-Francois Rivard
1990 34+ "Take Five"
Lake Lanier, GA





Message: 3
Date: Fri, 5 Aug 2016 16:43:55 -0400
From: David Knecht  <mailto:davidakne...@gmail.com> <davidakne...@gmail.com>
To: CnC CnC discussion list  <mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Finally Won a Race
Message-ID:  <mailto:ae5ea07a-fe1d-4e6d-99d9-0cfb8eb94...@gmail.com>
<ae5ea07a-fe1d-4e6d-99d9-0cfb8eb94...@gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

We had a very light wind race on Wednesday and the downwind leg was a reach
to broad reach   I could not get the genoa to sit well and then I noticed
one of the other boats had the whisker pole to leeward holding the clew out.
I tried it and it seemed to help. Is this something others do?  Dave







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