No worries. I try and be as short as possible, Siri does not always get all my words right!Sorry, wasn't poking fun at you. I thought that there might be some new slang term that I had missed.
Amen.It's way more easy to lose the trust of the crew than it is to gain the trust of the crew!
Except for the spiders.There is nothing fast, cool, or macho about a boat with its rail in the water.
Backstay will not bend the mast of the Catalina 22, or any other masthead boat.I don't know if that boat has a backstay, but if it does, try putting some bend in the mast to take out some of the belly. Don't over do it, or you will reduce the draft and loose speed.
You could use it to tighten the luff on your jib, but that seems like the wrong way to go about that. Maybe just to loosen the stays in preparation for lowering the mast?Then what is the point of an adjustable backstay?
No, that's exactly what its for, to add or reduces headstay sag. This shapes the headsail for optimal performance. This happens on simple fractional rigs (no runners) as well, but not to the same degree.You could use it to tighten the luff on your jib, but that seems like the wrong way to go about that. Maybe just to loosen the stays in preparation for lowering the mast?
-Will (Dragonfly)
A clarifying point... the ability to bend the mast has nothing to do with swept spreaders. Its where the headstay/hounds attaches vs the backstay that matters. Originally, fractional boats had straight spreaders as well, but needed check stays and running backs to keep the mast up. The newer, simplified fractional rig with swept spreaders triangulates the base of the rig and eliminates that need.Thanks, I did not realize it was a masthead boat. Now that I actually looked at photos, it looks like the spreaders go straight out, so no way to bend the mast at all.
Sailing upwind ... It will flatten your headsail as the wind strengthens. I find that it significantly reduces weather helm when I adjust it as wind picks up. To me, it's as necessary and effective as any other sail control device. It is very easy to set it up if you have split backstay.Then what is the point of an adjustable backstay?
As you probably know, bend and rake is not the same thing. On my masthead rig, the shape of the mast certainly limits bending. I'm setting the rig for rake, and not even considering bending. I'm also adjusting tension as prescribed at a stand-still condition, so that means that the backstay is neither "loose" nor "tight". I have just one set of lowers and they are slightly swept back. As wind increases above 10 to 12 knots (true), tightening the backstay certainly does help to eliminate head stay sag and flattens the headsail, making the helm have a 'lighter' feel. The lower stays do seem to loosen slightly, as witnessed by what appears to be slightly more slack in the leeward shroud. So, I'm guessing that yes, it does affect the lower shrouds. If you realize that increased wind will load up your head sail and pull the mast forward, it will cause headstay sag, and it also affects the lower shrouds. So, the over-riding concern that I have is to bring that mast back to the preferred rake where head stay sag is normal (even as the wind increases). Thus the lowers should also be brought back to normal. The purpose is to bring that rake back to normal as the wind increases. It requires more back stay tension to do so as the wind increases.If this is the case and you tune the rig to have the recommended 6-8 inches of rake is that taken with a loose backstay or tight? Also when you tension the backstay to shape the headsail are you not also pulling against the forward lowers and changing their tension as well this changing the original tuned rake or bend? Sorry for the question here but I'm just trying to better understand the rig tuning process so that if spring ever arrives here in MN I can get out racing again.
Also more to the topic of the thread it is my understanding that more bend / rake will lower the heeling angle as well because it moves the draft forward in the sails thought the boat will also not point as high.
Ok learning something new here, I was mistaken in assuming that prebend and rake were the same thing. Being that they are different and that backstay tension does not affect the overall rake of the mast as that is set by the forestay then more to @Gene Neill question how and what does the back stay tension do? It seems that although it is adding tension to the forestay it is also adding a slight bit of stretch as well. Wouldn't that affect rake? I have noticed better performance by loosening the backstay down wind and tightening it upwind and so I am just trying to understand how all this works in theory / mechanics.@LakeShark ,
First remember that rake and bend are two totally different things.
Your mast rake is set by your forestay length. I can assure you that nothing you do to your backstay will effect it!