Running back to making your life easier.
After Mr Pierson has advised making one's 'life easier' maybe this will sound stupid.Mr Napoleon, set the running backs at about the same angle as the forestay (so that the mast appears to bisect the angle). This is about 3/4 to 4/5 of the way back along the boom (?). You can move them back as you need to but I would not move them much farther forward than that. Typically the leeward one is slackened to let the boom run out if needs be. On some rigs people actually set them on a piece of genny track and, rather than taking them in, haul the track car aft. This involves a LOT of leverage but you may see stuff like this on ocean-racing boats and those guys have a good idea of what's going on.Now to reiterate: the whole point of the cutter is NOT to be an efficient race boat (try dipping a pole on one). It's to be able to set and shorten sail and still keep the centre of effort where it belongs. Large single-headsail boats do not have this valuable luxury. Typically they roll some jib in and maybe reef the main, but in doing so the little scrap of jib left actually moves their CE forward which inhibits their pointing ability (doubtless the same folks who claim 'Cherubini Hunters don't point!' are probably sailing with half the jib rolled in during hefty weather). With the cutter, furl the Yankee first, reef the main maybe even twice, and you will have a very manageable, comfortable little rig for those over-30-kt forced marches home. I've got a lot of experience with double-headsail rigs and to me there is no contest. Gorilla-gripping the wheel in nasty air whilst trying to manage a large jib, whether fully set or rolled in with a now-aerodynamically-compromised headfoil, is not what I call making my life easier, sorry.Remember also that the H-37C was designed as a 'semi-retirement' boat for couples in their 50s in the Gulf, and, with small, manageable sails that do NOT require a lot of extra gear to handle, it does that job VERY well.JC 2