Disadvantages of loose-footed main (re: John F)
John F's point about the inability to boom-furl a loose-footed main in a blow is significant. I too have a traveler on my first-generation H25 (not end-boom sheeting) and have also questioned the efficiency of a loose-footed set-up. I recently suggested to a sailmaker that I might just take the boom off and tack the main to the spinnaker turning blocks to see what it does, and the sailmaker said to just leave it out of the boom groove, use the outhaul, and test it that way.The fact is that it is practically impossible to tension a boom-footed sail so tightly as to remove ALL effect of its being supported by the boom. Every book on sailing I have read says that the common tendency to shorten sail on a ketch or yawl to just jib and mizzen is a mistake. The jib pulling from one point on the masthead places tremendous bending and compression moments on the spar, especially in a blow, whereas dropping the mizzen and jib and shortening to moderately-reefed main alone is easier to control, provides calmer sea motion, and relieves those masthead stresses. And that is with a boltrope mainsail on vertical spar supported at least eight different places with shrouds and end stays. Consider also the Cherubini 48 staysail schooner, as originally designed with NO Bergstrom rig, nor a standing backstay, using only running backstays and the mainsheet, drawing against the enormous hoist of the mainsail boltrope, to support the entire rig of two headsails and a fisherman's top-- no differently than all the famous schooners of John Alden. If the boom boltrope is unimportant to strength, is there no reason to not fly the H dimension loose too, like a staysail behind the mast? But there IS.A much smaller boom, unsupported but for sheet, outhaul, and gooseneck (especially with mid-boom sheeting, not pulling opposite the outhaul), is placed in a recipe for breakage under extreme conditions. So the sailor concerned about this will probably shorten to his roller-furling headsail alone, and we are back to the first point-load problem again.I have seen people break booms on moderate days by jibing with the preventer still set. I do NOT want to be in a situation in which my boom is asked to bear all those point loads without having any other option.The mainsail was long ago designed with a boom not because sail designers and boat designers did not have any better idea. It would have been just as simple to fly a loose-footed main in the 1700s as now. The boom-footed main was intended to provide flattening and support along the base of the sail. In the face of the benefits of a loose-footed main, the boom-based main has to be seen as a compromise for safety and strength. That's the price we pay for being careful.Neglecting to consider what has been proven by empirical and mathematical data is tantamount to shoddy seamanship. Do without the boom if you like; but don't claim you have not compromised strength or safety.JC 2cherubiniyachts@aol.com