Rake, Weather Helm and Heel
Mikey: Rake is one of the factors in weather helm, along with sail trim and wind strength. If you ever get on a board sailer you will discover that steering is by tilting the mast forward and backward, i.e., changing the rake of the sail. What's actually happening is that you're changing the location of the center of effort relative to the center of lateral resistance. Think of a windex: push behind the pivot, it points towards you, push in front of the pivot and it turns away from you. Push at the pivot and its neutral (if it doesn't fall over). The pivot is the center of lateral resistance, your finger pushing is the center of effort. Similarly, if you let out your main sheet, the main is producing a smaller proportion of the oveall power of your sails, so the center of effort moves forward, changing its position relative to the center of lateral resistance and reducing weather helm. I've met sailors who can steer keel boats this way, and its said to be an emergency method of maintaining steering control if you lose your rudder. As for heel, well, sails develop lift (power) perpendicular to the leeward surface of the sail, at all points on the sail. Since most of the sail faces to the side of the boat, it pushes that way, on a long lever we call a mast. This is how we wash the windows, excuse me, why we heel.Jim Kolstoe