More Heavy Wind Observations
I took the boat out again last Saturday and experimented more with heavy-weather sailing. I promised to write about my experiences, both to reply to my own post and also to help others with these experiences. I have a mainsail with two reefs and a 100% high-clew, furling headsail. We sailed across "the Slot" in SF Bay twice, and beat towards the GG bridge. According to the weather station on Angel Island, we sailed in 29 - 31 kts each way, with gusts in the mid-to-high-30's. Here's what I found:1) The boat sails poorly with just a full mainsail. With no jib, the boat doesn't heel much, but you don't go anywhere either. We could beat to weather, but only at about 2.5 knots.2) A reefed jib helped with the heeling, but made it impossible to point. We kept the full main up, took three turns on the jib, and moved the fairleads forward to erase all wrinkles from the jib. Then, we put a reef into the main. We could sail well-balanced and the heeling was in control, but we simply couldn't point. We'd tack back and forth and not gain anything to windward. Speed was good. I'm wondering if this was due to my jib-- I've never been happy with the jib shape when reefed, even just a little bit.3) With full headsail, the boat came to life and could point really well.4) The best sail combination was the full jib with one reef in the main. With this combination we could point as well as anybody, except a J-105 who could sail a few degrees closer. We had to sheet in the jib hard though-- harder than we first imagined, and our fairleads were set pretty far back. That being said, we weren't spilling wind from the top of the jib. Our beating speed, hard on the wind, was about 6 kts, and heeling was between 20 and 25 degrees.5) With the full jib and 1-reef, we had the traveller all the way down, but the sheet and the vang in tight to flatten the mainsail. But in the higher gusts we had to dump the sheet. At times we weren't catching any wind at all with the main-- it was completely backwinded. Surprisingly, the boat still pointed quite nicely-- didn't lose even a degree off the wind. In the gusts, we rounded up-- there was no leeward helm at all with just the jib and a flopping main.6) While beating, we were passed by two Catalina 36's who flew their full main and 100% jibs. Both sails were hard on the wind with good shape (no spilling wind). With our jib and almost completely backwinded 1-reefed main, we stared in amazement as how they could fly their full rig. They couldn't point any higher than us, but they sure left us behind.7) When reaching, I could gain about 1/2 knot boatspeed by poling out the jib on a short pole. I have on board the spinnaker pole from my Capri 22, which is about 8' long. By poling out the jib, I could effectively sheet it at a point outside the hull of the boat. It also helped to reduce heeling, and reduce rounding up in the gusts.That's about all I can remember right now. It was a fun ride, and I feel comfortable now with the boat in these conditions. If I was ever in stronger winds, my plan would be to drop the main entirely to get it out of the way, and then put up a smaller jib since I lose all shape, even when reefed a little bit.Once again, I'd welcome anybody's comments. Is there anything else I could do differently or better, or something I may have missed?