R
Richard Gottlieb
I own a 2000 Hunter 270 with a roller furling 100% jib. I don't own a reacher or spinnaker. I recently went daysailing with a fiend of mine who runs the sailing school at my yacht club. During the course of our sail, while going downwind, we experimented with drawing the active jib sheet around the shrouds and outboard of the boat. This had a dramatic (I thought so) improvement in performance. As the clew of the jib held further outboard, the "slot" between the main and the jib is opened. Furthermore, the jib is not being constantly blaketed by the mainsail which previously caused the jib to repeatedly open and then collapse.This got me to thinking. And I then went to West Marine and picked up 60' of 3/8" sta-set line, a pair of 57mm carbo block and a pair of snap shackles, along with a set of "winchers" (rubber caps that fit onto the lewmar 6 winches to make them self-tailing and self-cleating). I doubled the line over and attached the same to the clew of the jib *below* the attachment point for the existing jib sheets. I then ran each line outboard of the shrouds to the blocks that are attached to the stainless steel loop on the aft railing and then over to the winch.The effect of all this is to create a second outboard set of jib sheets for downwind sailing. When sailing downwind, the inboard jib sheets can be left alone to be "lazy" set of sheets or used a a barber hauler to fine tune the set of the jib. Upwind, the outboard jib sheets become the "lazy" set of sheets. I can now run downwind wing and wing with much greater stability.Food for thought.