I'm sure there is endless thought and opinion on racing sails but I thought I'd pose this question...
First a little background...
We own a Hunter 216 (2004) that has been "tricked out" (as my wife says) for racing excluding the sail inventory. The sails are Dacron. The jib is new (Ullman Sails) as of last year and the main is OEM (North Sails). The jib is integrated into the headstay on a furling (216 "feature"). The main was inspected and in "excellent" condition this Spring. The spinnaker is Doyle and 2 years old. We race on the Chesapeake part of the 4P offshore fleet and pretty much everyone else has "fancy" sails.
And here is the question...
Considering the 216 was manufactured as a simple, cheap daysailor that has been coerced into a racing boat, could we truly expect to gain a huge increase in performance and advantage simply upgrading our sails to higher end materials? Why and why not?
Thanks!
First a little background...
We own a Hunter 216 (2004) that has been "tricked out" (as my wife says) for racing excluding the sail inventory. The sails are Dacron. The jib is new (Ullman Sails) as of last year and the main is OEM (North Sails). The jib is integrated into the headstay on a furling (216 "feature"). The main was inspected and in "excellent" condition this Spring. The spinnaker is Doyle and 2 years old. We race on the Chesapeake part of the 4P offshore fleet and pretty much everyone else has "fancy" sails.
And here is the question...
Considering the 216 was manufactured as a simple, cheap daysailor that has been coerced into a racing boat, could we truly expect to gain a huge increase in performance and advantage simply upgrading our sails to higher end materials? Why and why not?
Thanks!