Over the years, I have seen several threads reporting the sighting of boats with a very strange unstayed, rotating mast that has rigid fixed booms that extend forward and aft from the mast. The rig is the AeroRig and have all sails connected to and rotating with the mast and the only control line to the hull is the main sheet. On these threads there has been much conjecture and hypothesis on how they work but no firsthand experience. I recently was able to crew on an 85’ steel center boarder on 70-mile transit in wind ranging from 0 to 25 knots so I thought I would provide some first-hand insight into the rig.
On these rigs the main is fairly conventional except for the boom being a solid extension of the mast and rotating with it. The jib on the other hand is not attached to the hull at all. The Jib is self-tacking and attached to the forward end of the boom extending forward from the mast and sheeted to a curved track that is attached to the foreboom just ahead of the mast.
The boat is a custom 85’ steel center board monohull with 7’ draft with board up and 14’ with board down. Displacement is 39 long ton. The air draft is over 85’ and the sails are new this year with the main modified to a Fathead full battened main with a lot of roach. This added 20% more sail area over the previous main to improve light air performance.
My first impression is that this is the easiest to sail boat I have ever been on. Of course the fact that all winches are hydraulic helped in that matter but even when using the winches manually there was very little work to do once the main was up. Trimming consists of setting the draft of the main with the outhaul and the draft of the jib with the jib sheet and the twist with a down-hauler. Once that was done you trim or ease the main sheet to point the whole rig at the wind angle that you are set up for. Main sheet loads are so light that most times the 2-part sheet could be pulled in most of the way by hand. The winch was only required to get the boom to centerline for close hauled course.
On these rigs the main is fairly conventional except for the boom being a solid extension of the mast and rotating with it. The jib on the other hand is not attached to the hull at all. The Jib is self-tacking and attached to the forward end of the boom extending forward from the mast and sheeted to a curved track that is attached to the foreboom just ahead of the mast.
The boat is a custom 85’ steel center board monohull with 7’ draft with board up and 14’ with board down. Displacement is 39 long ton. The air draft is over 85’ and the sails are new this year with the main modified to a Fathead full battened main with a lot of roach. This added 20% more sail area over the previous main to improve light air performance.
My first impression is that this is the easiest to sail boat I have ever been on. Of course the fact that all winches are hydraulic helped in that matter but even when using the winches manually there was very little work to do once the main was up. Trimming consists of setting the draft of the main with the outhaul and the draft of the jib with the jib sheet and the twist with a down-hauler. Once that was done you trim or ease the main sheet to point the whole rig at the wind angle that you are set up for. Main sheet loads are so light that most times the 2-part sheet could be pulled in most of the way by hand. The winch was only required to get the boom to centerline for close hauled course.
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