...so I'm working on my new wooden gaff 'boom' and reading through some old books about square-rigger standing and running rigging. I noticed that those ships had sheets and braces. The sheets (usually only on the courses) simply pulled the sail corners down and could provide a little trim. The braces, on the other hand, turned the yards about the horizontal plane. So my question is why do we call the sheet in our Bermudian sloops a sheet and not a brace?
I'm thinking that on old boomless, fore-and-aft rigged boats, the line connected directly to the clew would technically be a sheet...such as it is on a jib. It's just interesting that it carried on the name even after a boom was added. Just tradition I guess???
While I'm at it, what we call an outhaul and a downhaul is really a sheet...and a boom preventer is really a tack. Taking it one step further, a traveller is really just a sort of inboard boomkin on a track????
This is really fun!!!
I'm thinking that on old boomless, fore-and-aft rigged boats, the line connected directly to the clew would technically be a sheet...such as it is on a jib. It's just interesting that it carried on the name even after a boom was added. Just tradition I guess???
While I'm at it, what we call an outhaul and a downhaul is really a sheet...and a boom preventer is really a tack. Taking it one step further, a traveller is really just a sort of inboard boomkin on a track????
This is really fun!!!