I got the chance yesterday to sail my newly purchased 2004 Hunter 216. Air was very light so just a small sample size. I took the boat out by myself. I was happy with the way the boat motored on and off the lift and in and out of the marina. It was not difficult to get sails up and underway. But like I said it was very light air.
Things I noticed. As has been mentioned before the boat could really use a traveler on the main sheet. I feel like the Jib blocks need to be further aft as the jib does not pull far enough aft at least in light air. I do have a newer jib so maybe its a bit bigger than stock. It appears 110-115% basing off the mast. I was able to shape the jib with the lazy sheet as I have previously learned with other boats. This I am sure only needed in light air. The boat seemed strong to the weather which is always nice.
Issue I saw is off the wind. When trying to run downwind you can't let the sail out very far at all until its into the spreaders. I'm used to having to be mindful of the shrouds but not so quickly into the spreader bar. I suppose this is do to the large rake of the spreader bars due to the lack of a backstay.
What are others doing with the 216? Do you run out your main and let it sit against the spreader down wind? Just a quick guess but I'm not sure I can get the boom to 45 degrees from center (theoretic over the hull sheeting point being 0) before the sail is touching the spreader. Is this just a boat the has to run a broad reach downwind. I don't have the spinnaker set up so running downwind with the sail out 40-45 degrees doesn't seem efficient to me.
Side bar question. Since I don't have the spinnaker hardware, has anyone added an eye to the front of the mast to facilitated using a pole on the jib down wind? Allowing the boat to run in the "wing and wing" set up. This is the normal downwind configuration for spinnaker less smaller boats. I have the pole and ordered a mast ring off the Hunter parts site. Just curious if anyone has set their boat up this way.
Reefing question. Since this is a loose footed sail, when you reef do you tie off the excess sail just around itself or tie down to the boom. I'm used to tying down to the boom.
Thanks in advance for any insite!!
Things I noticed. As has been mentioned before the boat could really use a traveler on the main sheet. I feel like the Jib blocks need to be further aft as the jib does not pull far enough aft at least in light air. I do have a newer jib so maybe its a bit bigger than stock. It appears 110-115% basing off the mast. I was able to shape the jib with the lazy sheet as I have previously learned with other boats. This I am sure only needed in light air. The boat seemed strong to the weather which is always nice.
Issue I saw is off the wind. When trying to run downwind you can't let the sail out very far at all until its into the spreaders. I'm used to having to be mindful of the shrouds but not so quickly into the spreader bar. I suppose this is do to the large rake of the spreader bars due to the lack of a backstay.
What are others doing with the 216? Do you run out your main and let it sit against the spreader down wind? Just a quick guess but I'm not sure I can get the boom to 45 degrees from center (theoretic over the hull sheeting point being 0) before the sail is touching the spreader. Is this just a boat the has to run a broad reach downwind. I don't have the spinnaker set up so running downwind with the sail out 40-45 degrees doesn't seem efficient to me.
Side bar question. Since I don't have the spinnaker hardware, has anyone added an eye to the front of the mast to facilitated using a pole on the jib down wind? Allowing the boat to run in the "wing and wing" set up. This is the normal downwind configuration for spinnaker less smaller boats. I have the pole and ordered a mast ring off the Hunter parts site. Just curious if anyone has set their boat up this way.
Reefing question. Since this is a loose footed sail, when you reef do you tie off the excess sail just around itself or tie down to the boom. I'm used to tying down to the boom.
Thanks in advance for any insite!!