size of anchor sail for a 25?

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Mar 20, 2012
3,983
Cal 34-III, MacGregor 25 Salem, Oregon
I want to build an anchor sail for my 25 ft boat, but I need some information on proper sizing....
I have seen that sailrite offers a kit, but i already have all the material and supplies, but i dont have a pattern or the length of the luff, leach and foot....
can someone help me out with the measurements and any hints or tips that would be useful when assembling it? thank you...
 
Oct 6, 2008
857
Hunter, Island Packet, Catalina, San Juan 26,38,22,23 Kettle Falls, Washington
I can not advise exact measurements on the size of your sail but I can give you a starting point. Your Mac 25 is a light boat and you are probably using a line rode rather than chain. I would think you are using a delta style anchor in the neighborhood of 10 to 12 lbs. All this is based on the Hunter 26, Catalina 22 and San Juan 23 that I have owned and anchored on many, many times.
Because of the weight factor and rode you will need a larger sail than would a heavy boat and heavy rode.
I sail in fresh water and use the gear described above with 25 feet of 5/16th chain and 150 feet of 1/2 nylon line. I try to anchor in 10 to 12 feet of water and add an additional 3 feet of rise for the distance between the water and anchor roller. I always use at least a 7 to 1 ratio for scope. Thus 10 to 12 feet of water and 3 feet to the roller equals 13 to 15 feet of depth calling for 91 to 105 feet of anchor scope. I lay down approxamatly 50 feet of line and back down the anchor as hard as possible until it holds and then run out the rest of the line and again back it down. After all this I have never needed a anchor riding sail.
If you still need this sail I would try a luff of 4 feet and base of 3 feet.
Ray
 
Sep 5, 2007
689
MacGregor 26X Rochester
If you have a small tarp laying around, fold it diagonally around the backstay and join the two grommets with a piece of line and secure it to the base of the mast or wherever is convenient. See how it behaves, and if you like it, make one of similar size. Or mess about with an old bed sheet, reducing the size until you're happy, or too far and no longer happy, whatever the case.
 

Sumner

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Jan 31, 2009
5,254
Macgregor & Endeavour 26S and 37 Utah's Canyon Country
We bought the kit...

http://www.sailrite.com/Anchor-Riding-Sail-Kit-12-5-Sq-Feet

...and it has the measurements on that link. Ruth sewed....



.... it up and we use it quite often and it does help.



We have followed their instructions on how to rig it going off the center-line from the backstay off to either port or starboard and it seems to work well that way. It doesn't eliminate sailing on anchor but sure slows it down and limits the swing.

The page on it and its use is here...

http://purplesagetradingpost.com/sumner/macgregor-canvas/canvas-5.html

and here are two videos of it on anchor....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkLbyBld1lY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MKjU842c9Zo

Sum

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Our Endeavour 37

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May 23, 2007
1,306
Catalina Capri 22 Albany, Oregon
Mine looks to be a little smaller than Sumner's. I made it from an old pentex genoa.

 
Mar 20, 2012
3,983
Cal 34-III, MacGregor 25 Salem, Oregon
I currently use a 16lb danforth anchor with 16ft of 5/16 chain and 200ft of rode, but will be adding a delta or a bruce style anchor within a couple months as the primary anchor...
the lake I sail on a lot quite often has some strong winds at night. when anchored out (15-25ft of water) I let out around 130ft of rode and we will swing an arc of nearly 140 degrees.... sometimes it seems like more.
as long as the wind blows, and sometimes it will blow all night until about 5:30am, we constantly swing back and forth.
laying out a second anchor may be a better choice under the circumstances for safety reasons, but because I have the materials and the tools, I want to experiment with an anchor sail...

Sumner, and Chris, do either of you think more sail would be better?... if so, would you have it taller, longer, or proportionally bigger?
 

Sumner

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Jan 31, 2009
5,254
Macgregor & Endeavour 26S and 37 Utah's Canyon Country
...Sumner, and Chris, do either of you think more sail would be better?... if so, would you have it taller, longer, or proportionally bigger?
I think ours is about as large as I would want to go as far as rigging it and I think it is designed for boats quite a bit larger than ours, but I think our lighter boats probably sail on anchor more. At least that is the case between our two boats. From the one trip we did take with the Endeavour I don't think we will need an anchor sail for her.

The sail is a sail and the way it seems to work is that it sails the boat off in one direction and then keeps it pretty much there. Of course the wind isn't steady even though it seems to be and you still move some. Since is a sail if I think the winds are going over 25 I'll take it down.

I can rig it in just a minute as I added another uphaul line and block just for it and the bottom lines are fixed once you set them up once and snap on with carabiners. I found that by raising it some above the solar panels higher on the backstay that it was more effective.

As far as an anchor our 22 lb. claw worked very well in Canada and Idaho and I'd think you might be in similar conditions. We never drug anchor there. We now also have a 25 lb. Manson that I think is a better anchor, but if you didn't want to spend that much the 22 lb claw is great.

Two anchors off the bow would help in either a Bahamian style moor or in a "V", but I'd never put out a stern anchor in those conditions unless you were 100% sure the wind was going to be in the same direction all night.

You know we finally got so use to swinging on anchor that we don't even notice it. I think I use the sail more as something else to do to keep me busy :). We use the anchor alarm on the Garmin 76 and it is amazing when you look at the distance you have traveled on anchor in 2-3 days. Set the alarm right where you drop the anchor and before you back down and the alarm can be set for a smaller radius,

Sum

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Our Endeavour 37

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Aug 22, 2011
1,113
MacGregor Venture V224 Cheeseland
I think ours is about as large as I would want to go as far as rigging it and I think it is designed for boats quite a bit larger than ours, but I think our lighter boats probably sail on anchor more. At least that is the case between our two boats. From the one trip we did take with the Endeavour I don't think we will need an anchor sail for her.

The sail is a sail and the way it seems to work is that it sails the boat off in one direction and then keeps it pretty much there. Of course the wind isn't steady even though it seems to be and you still move some. Since is a sail if I think the winds are going over 25 I'll take it down.

I can rig it in just a minute as I added another uphaul line and block just for it and the bottom lines are fixed once you set them up once and snap on with carabiners. I found that by raising it some above the solar panels higher on the backstay that it was more effective.

As far as an anchor our 22 lb. claw worked very well in Canada and Idaho and I'd think you might be in similar conditions. We never drug anchor there. We now also have a 25 lb. Manson that I think is a better anchor, but if you didn't want to spend that much the 22 lb claw is great.

Two anchors off the bow would help in either a Bahamian style moor or in a "V", but I'd never put out a stern anchor in those conditions unless you were 100% sure the wind was going to be in the same direction all night.

You know we finally got so use to swinging on anchor that we don't even notice it. I think I use the sail more as something else to do to keep me busy :). We use the anchor alarm on the Garmin 76 and it is amazing when you look at the distance you have traveled on anchor in 2-3 days. Set the alarm right where you drop the anchor and before you back down and the alarm can be set for a smaller radius,

Sum

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Our Endeavour 37

Our MacGregor 26-S Pages

Our Trips to Utah, Idaho, Canada, Florida

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On anchor in daylight its kind of fun watching the land pass by the windows from inside the cabin...sort of. At night its just plain disconcerting when suddenly waking up and the shore lights are whizzing by.


So; could I just cut and hem a similar size and outline shape from say....a couple of yards of nylon, and hoist it up off center like you did and use it as an anchor sail?????
 

Sumner

.
Jan 31, 2009
5,254
Macgregor & Endeavour 26S and 37 Utah's Canyon Country
On anchor in daylight its kind of fun watching the land pass by the windows from inside the cabin...sort of. At night its just plain disconcerting when suddenly waking up and the shore lights are whizzing by.


So; could I just cut and hem a similar size and outline shape from say....a couple of yards of nylon, and hoist it up off center like you did and use it as an anchor sail?????
I'd try it if you have the material. I can't really see an air foil shape to the one we sewed up from the kit. It it pretty straight forward. The kit did have the stuff to hank the sail on so it was convenient.

The lights at night are pretty interesting as you mentioned. I often think it is someone motoring by :),

Sum

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Our Endeavour 37

Our MacGregor 26-S Pages

Our Trips to Utah, Idaho, Canada, Florida

Mac-Venture Links
 
May 23, 2007
1,306
Catalina Capri 22 Albany, Oregon
My riding sail seems about right. I think I took the dimensions from sailrite's smallest one and cut my old sail to fit. I'm pretty sure it would work ok for your boat.

Anchor wise I have 11 & 17 lb claws. The 11 has about 12' of chain and 150' of rode. The 17 has 20ish feet plus 150' of rode. I also have a 13 pound danforth with 6' of chain but that's strictly a lunch hook for the lake.

Have you taken a look at Detroit Lake lately? Deep enough to sail? Still less than 4' of water at the foot of the ramp at Richardson and I've got a bad feeling we're not going to get enough for me to launch this year. Time to start doing some serious planning for the San Juans trip.
 
Mar 20, 2012
3,983
Cal 34-III, MacGregor 25 Salem, Oregon
My riding sail seems about right. I think I took the dimensions from sailrite's smallest one and cut my old sail to fit. I'm pretty sure it would work ok for your boat.

Anchor wise I have 11 & 17 lb claws. The 11 has about 12' of chain and 150' of rode. The 17 has 20ish feet plus 150' of rode. I also have a 13 pound danforth with 6' of chain but that's strictly a lunch hook for the lake.

Have you taken a look at Detroit Lake lately? Deep enough to sail? Still less than 4' of water at the foot of the ramp at Richardson and I've got a bad feeling we're not going to get enough for me to launch this year. Time to start doing some serious planning for the San Juans trip.
there will be enough water to fill the reservoir, and we havent been by detroit to see how its doing...
we are planning a trip to the river around the middle of next month.... gotta do something to get the cobwebs knocked off of her and make sure she still floats with all the extra weight and all the holes I drilled in to her during the winter:D
 
Jan 22, 2008
8,050
Beneteau 323 Annapolis MD
I have a DIY article from the January 2007 (Sailmagazine.com) issue about making a riding sail. Jess Gregory, author. There is a graph to calculate the area of the sail. For the 25, they suggest a 15-square-foot sail. The small print says boats that have the sail mounted to the topping lift (as opposed to the back stay) can improve results by increasing by 15 percent. Not sure how they calculate it, but here is a sampling. It seems starting at 15 feet, for each increase in length by 5 feet, add 5 sq feet of sail. Boat length/sq feet:
15/5,
20/10
25/15
30/20
35/25
40/30
45/35
50/40
55/45
60/50
 
Aug 22, 2011
1,113
MacGregor Venture V224 Cheeseland
I'd try it if you have the material. I can't really see an air foil shape to the one we sewed up from the kit. It it pretty straight forward. The kit did have the stuff to hank the sail on so it was convenient.

The lights at night are pretty interesting as you mentioned. I often think it is someone motoring by :),

Sum

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Our Endeavour 37


Our MacGregor 26-S Pages

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Thank you Sum; I'm going to rig something up.

15 Square Foot sounds like a good start.
 
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