.. of all the boats at the marina with furling jibs. What would it take to convert my hank on jib to a furler?
It might in certain conditions. The slightly reduced sail area, the extra cloth on the leech effecting shape, and the moving the foot off the deck will effect speed, from very little in a good breeze to noticeable in One Design racing in light airs.Jackdaw: Won't it cost him a tad on top speed? Chief
You shouldn't be. I've had both, and on smaller boats I like hanks (easier to have 2 jibs, less complication, easier to stow sail)... of all the boats at the marina with furling jibs. What would it take to convert my hank on jib to a furler?
Good call. The C22 is just too small to justify the almost $2k conversion cost(New furler and headsail) ....plus the poorer performance for just a little convenience.Hmm... It sound like my jealousy might be misplaced. I had no idea it would involve modifications to the jib itself. I have a jib down haul, wouldn't want to sail without it. I have but one 110 jib. (The PO included another but it turned out to be for a C-27). The idea of a sail bag sounds like a more economical solution.