Does sail cloth loose it's oomph with extreme age even if not used much?
I am considering reducing in size a 30 year old full batten main sail which is about 15% too large in luff and foot for my boat. Made by North. Very heavy dacron ... it weighs an absolute ton in the sail bag compared to any other sail I've slung over my shoulder. My guess it was used only a few seasons before the owner decided to change sails. And has been stored ever since. Or the boat was hardly ever used. No tears/repairs and not much sign of wear of the cloth itself. Even the leech is strong without much loss of fabric stiffness. All the stitching is sound everywhere. In appearance, the fabric has only a few mostly removable stains and of course the usual yellowing with age. But still more white in appearance than yellow.
Before starting on the project, does anyone know if old but good condition sail cloth is likely to hold up for a few more seasons? I ask because Dacron after all would seem to be a type of plastic of sorts. My experience is that old plastics can become brittle and they fail.
The only items I've done so far is make measurements, ponder whether to go ahead or not, and milk out the shrunken bolt rope along its luff sleeve. (The sail gained 6" in luff length after. I wonder if the bolt rope actually shrinks or is it the sail fabric that stretches with use so needs more bolt rope length to compensate?)
I will lose the bottom-most full length batten in the shortening. So the sail will become a three instead of four batten sail. I could add a normal (short) leech batten somewhere between the existing full batten sleeves. Anybody care to suggest if this is necessary? Where would be best? In the lower portion of the sail, or the middle or at the top?
Thanks for your thoughts and suggestions.
I am considering reducing in size a 30 year old full batten main sail which is about 15% too large in luff and foot for my boat. Made by North. Very heavy dacron ... it weighs an absolute ton in the sail bag compared to any other sail I've slung over my shoulder. My guess it was used only a few seasons before the owner decided to change sails. And has been stored ever since. Or the boat was hardly ever used. No tears/repairs and not much sign of wear of the cloth itself. Even the leech is strong without much loss of fabric stiffness. All the stitching is sound everywhere. In appearance, the fabric has only a few mostly removable stains and of course the usual yellowing with age. But still more white in appearance than yellow.
Before starting on the project, does anyone know if old but good condition sail cloth is likely to hold up for a few more seasons? I ask because Dacron after all would seem to be a type of plastic of sorts. My experience is that old plastics can become brittle and they fail.
The only items I've done so far is make measurements, ponder whether to go ahead or not, and milk out the shrunken bolt rope along its luff sleeve. (The sail gained 6" in luff length after. I wonder if the bolt rope actually shrinks or is it the sail fabric that stretches with use so needs more bolt rope length to compensate?)
I will lose the bottom-most full length batten in the shortening. So the sail will become a three instead of four batten sail. I could add a normal (short) leech batten somewhere between the existing full batten sleeves. Anybody care to suggest if this is necessary? Where would be best? In the lower portion of the sail, or the middle or at the top?
Thanks for your thoughts and suggestions.