Confessions of a sail trim fanatic ...
If you soak the cheeto in beer, you get better results. Measuring tenths of a knot was my goal a year ago. Does not work, forget measuring your speed with each sail trim change. Been there, done that, there is a much better path to happiness.I have become a fanatic when it comes to sail trim, have gone the route of using a GPS to measure speed (does not get much simpler) but was still dissatisfied ... as wind speed and angle changes as often as every 3 minutes or less. Not having a constant wind speed makes it very hard to adjust two or more controls (e.g. boom vang & sheet tension) and know if the speed change was from good sail trim ... or change in wind.I got satisfaction instead by:1. Understanding what my desired sail shape is for a given wind and sea condition, e.g. where do I want the draft positioned on the mainsail, leech open/closed, how much jib sag, etc. in 1 foot chop at 10-15 knots of wind.2. Understand which sail controls ideally affect sail shape on my boat (to move my draft forward, etc.) Note: no matter what book you read, your boat may handle differently ... which is part of the fun/art.3a When sailing alone: My challenge becomes to find which sail control adjustments get me the desired sail shape (and hence best speed) ... such optimization is less sensitive to small wind changes and provides instant feedback (I can see the draft, twist, etc. on the sail) and gratification (or fustration), and assurance that my success/failure is due to me alone, a feedback loop that the GPS, log, or cheeto, cannot give me (remember the instrument cannot tell me if I did good vs. the wind changed). 3b. Alernating with 3a above, when sailing against other boats of my type, the boats next to me become a much better comparison of my sail trim, and provides instant gratification that my electronic instrument can not give me (remember the instrument cannot tell me if I did good vs. the wind changed). When there isn't much wind, I then also get additional gratification when I sail circles around the other boats (when your good, you can eaily double your speed in light winds at or under 4 kts vs. trim challenged individuals)3c. Repeat steps 3a & 3b, re-read the text books, and incrementally get better. This is an experiened based learning process.4. That said ... it does help to refer to a GPS or a Cheeto, once you think you have achieved great sail trim ... to provide a reality check. Then you can say to yourself, I remember last time in simliar conditions I was slower, so this last idea I got out of the book is working for me !Happy sailing!