One day I was at a local sailor hangout and discussing the Regatta de Amigos race. One sailor who happens to teach ASA said "I own a Benny but I wouldn't take it on that race and a Hunter...without a backstay, I wouldn't even take that offshore". So that got me to thinking hard about the B&R rig.
When I walked home (my boat) I looked up at the mast and tried to figure out why they made it like that. It couldn't have been to get rid of the backstay so they can have a large roach as the first version of the B&R rig had a backstay. So why sweep back the spreaders? They always seem to get in the way on many angles of sail. I was puzzled but it started to come to me and I give credit to the few beers I had that night (beer always seems to get me thinking differently :dance
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I determined that night that they made it that way to give support to the middle of the mast as that's where most masts tend to break. The high tension put on the outside top shrouds pull back on the top but at the same time push forward at the two spreaders (my boat has double spreaders). Then the shorter mid shrouds pull back on the mast creating a stable mast in the middle.
So with the stablization of the middle of the mast and the small headsail (fractional rig), there isn't much risk of metal fatige in the middle of the masts that cause many masts to break. Why the small headsail helps? Because when sailing on just one sail in heavy winds, it doesn't create too much of a yank on the top of the mast. If it's a masthead rig and no main up, theory is that it will send a vibration down the mast to the unsupported middle of the mast. When I say unsupported, I mean forwards/backwards, not side to side.
So, there you have it. I thought I was sooo smart...or the beer was smart
. Well, a few days ago I went to the Hunter site to look at the new boats because of the talk of the boat show. I ran across their explanation of why the B&R rig is stronger then a normal rig. They said something about the rig being supported by an equal pressure on the shrouds. So I got to thinking at lunch today about it. I guess that under a normal rig and on a reach, most of the pressure is on the windward shroud. Under a B&R rig, I believe all the pressure is equally distributed between the windward shroud and the forestay. That makes sense.
So, I open this topic up for discussion on the Ask All Sailors to get a wide range of opinions, not only on my drunken state theory, but also Hunter's claim. Fire away. What do you think? Do you think they are stronger? Do you think they are weaker?
Note: many rigs with backstays have mid shrouds that are angled a little forward and backwards so that helps but it doesn't seem to have much angle to it so I'm not sold on that helping much.
When I walked home (my boat) I looked up at the mast and tried to figure out why they made it like that. It couldn't have been to get rid of the backstay so they can have a large roach as the first version of the B&R rig had a backstay. So why sweep back the spreaders? They always seem to get in the way on many angles of sail. I was puzzled but it started to come to me and I give credit to the few beers I had that night (beer always seems to get me thinking differently :dance
I determined that night that they made it that way to give support to the middle of the mast as that's where most masts tend to break. The high tension put on the outside top shrouds pull back on the top but at the same time push forward at the two spreaders (my boat has double spreaders). Then the shorter mid shrouds pull back on the mast creating a stable mast in the middle.
So with the stablization of the middle of the mast and the small headsail (fractional rig), there isn't much risk of metal fatige in the middle of the masts that cause many masts to break. Why the small headsail helps? Because when sailing on just one sail in heavy winds, it doesn't create too much of a yank on the top of the mast. If it's a masthead rig and no main up, theory is that it will send a vibration down the mast to the unsupported middle of the mast. When I say unsupported, I mean forwards/backwards, not side to side.
So, there you have it. I thought I was sooo smart...or the beer was smart
So, I open this topic up for discussion on the Ask All Sailors to get a wide range of opinions, not only on my drunken state theory, but also Hunter's claim. Fire away. What do you think? Do you think they are stronger? Do you think they are weaker?
Note: many rigs with backstays have mid shrouds that are angled a little forward and backwards so that helps but it doesn't seem to have much angle to it so I'm not sold on that helping much.