Cunningham - Do you need it?
I've also thought of adding a cunningham to my 23.5, but then I thought - what good would it do? I sail scows and Lasers as well, and in both cases the halyard is very rigid. In the case of the Laser, the sail slips over the mast, so in effect, it has a very rigid halyard. In the case of the scows, they use a wire halyard that is only about 12 -18" long, also very rigid. In these scenarios, the cunningham is very effective at tightening the luff of the sail and since the sail is rigidly attached at the head, it's the only way to control the luff tension.In the case of my 23.5, I have a full length halyard that is the entire length of my mast plus an extra 6 feet or so to lead back to the cleat. That means there is a lot of length to stretch. If you add a cunningham, aren't you just stretching your halyard more? Why not just wrap your current halyard around the winch and tighten or loosen it to control your luff? In effect, it is the opposite of the sails on the boats I mentioned above since the tack is fixed and you adjust the luff with the halyard.That being said, one of the things I dislike about the Hunter is that the tack is your fixed point for luff and foot adjusment, via the main halyard and the outhaul, respectively. Therefore, tightening your halyard will also tighten your outhaul, or loosening your outhaul may also loosen your luff...A cunningham may help isolate those controls ... or are we just trying to make race boats out of cruisers?BradS/V WikiWikiTiki