We will soon be in need of a new main sail and I would like to hear some ideas on designing a roller furling main on a 53' ketch.
Our present sail is a radial design sail of some esoteric fabric called "tape drive" by HR in NY. Though it is a fantastic sail design wise, the material is failing after only a few hundred days of sailing. However, this seems this is a very labor intensive cut, probably much more expensive than we can afford.
It seems sail design for roller furling boomed sails has not quite caught up with the realities of the systems. With infinite reefing, stresses on the reefed sail are not along a reinforced seam as they are in slab reefing and with a loose footed sail the out haul pressure is not directly along the boom, but more like the pull of a high cut Yankee (the boom raises as we reef). Obviously, a high cut Yankee design would cost too much sail area, so I'm looking for ideas on a compromise. Perhaps a miter cut sail, giving more strength in the direction of pull on the outhaul, but probably more susceptible to stretching when reefed. At any rate, it may need many small panels rather than several larger ones.
This sail sets much more like a jib than a boomed sail, being loose footed, using the outhaul and the sheet to obtain a good sail shape. Since most of our sailing is in 20 to 30 knots of wind (usually hard to weather) we often have the sail rolled in to the second spreaders, a DEEP reef, way beyond the reinforced reef points presently on the sail, see the pic above.
I am not a sail designer and would really appreciate some input as to what might work or not. Looking at a sail and sailing with it leads to many ideas, most of which are probably unworkable in reality.
You couldn't give me a sail built of any of the esoteric cloths for cruising, roller furling or not. I like Dacron and it has held up well over many, many thousands miles of sailing on vessels from gaffers built before 1900 to the Maxi racers of the seventies, for me.
Our present sail is a radial design sail of some esoteric fabric called "tape drive" by HR in NY. Though it is a fantastic sail design wise, the material is failing after only a few hundred days of sailing. However, this seems this is a very labor intensive cut, probably much more expensive than we can afford.
It seems sail design for roller furling boomed sails has not quite caught up with the realities of the systems. With infinite reefing, stresses on the reefed sail are not along a reinforced seam as they are in slab reefing and with a loose footed sail the out haul pressure is not directly along the boom, but more like the pull of a high cut Yankee (the boom raises as we reef). Obviously, a high cut Yankee design would cost too much sail area, so I'm looking for ideas on a compromise. Perhaps a miter cut sail, giving more strength in the direction of pull on the outhaul, but probably more susceptible to stretching when reefed. At any rate, it may need many small panels rather than several larger ones.
This sail sets much more like a jib than a boomed sail, being loose footed, using the outhaul and the sheet to obtain a good sail shape. Since most of our sailing is in 20 to 30 knots of wind (usually hard to weather) we often have the sail rolled in to the second spreaders, a DEEP reef, way beyond the reinforced reef points presently on the sail, see the pic above.
I am not a sail designer and would really appreciate some input as to what might work or not. Looking at a sail and sailing with it leads to many ideas, most of which are probably unworkable in reality.
You couldn't give me a sail built of any of the esoteric cloths for cruising, roller furling or not. I like Dacron and it has held up well over many, many thousands miles of sailing on vessels from gaffers built before 1900 to the Maxi racers of the seventies, for me.