Asymetric with a sock
Another advantage of the asymetric with a sock is that it is easily rigged before casting off - so we can shift from the 110 to the asymetric when the wind dies off.By the way, a good asymetric can sail a close reach in light air. When the winds dropped from 10 to 15 to 5 to 10 knots coming home from Put-in-Bay on Sunday, we were doing 3 to 5 knots in 45 degree apparent winds. Our friends with big gennies were motoring in those same winds. We've been on day long cruises when the wind came back later - so we just drop the sock, and unfurl the 110. My buddies with big gennies never seem to change to the more appropriate smaller jib when the wind pipes up, preferring to tolerate a lousy sail shape, excessive heel, and reduced drive from a genny that has been furled too far.I'm going to have to try the wing on wing trick with the 110 and the asymetric. Sounds much better than the continual collapsing of the asymetric behind the main. We have had great success on the other solution - don't run! Instead, we gybe downwind about 40 degrees above a straight run - so both the main and the asymetric are really pulling well.DavidLady Lillie