My second sailboat was a 16.5' Town Class, made by Lowell's Boat Shop in Amesbury, MA.( Marcus Lowell designed it in 1935 so the townies could afford it, as opposed to his more expensive yachts.) It had a traveler with no controls. Thus the mainsheet block always slid to leeward. I've been following two YouTube boatbuilding channels, one about Arabella, designed by William Atkin in 1938, and Tally Ho, designed by Albert Strange in 1910. Both these boats have similar travelers. I just ran across yet another YT channel: Two Blokes Build a Boat. They are building a Morgan Giles International 14 racing dinghy, also with such a traveler (see photo).
Not being an expert on travelers, I've long been puzzled about the thinking behind these travelers. I assume the designers believed their boat would always sail better with the boom out to leeward. My limited understanding is this will power up the mainsail, but reduce pointing. Or maybe designers just did this because other designers did it?
Does anyone know?
Not being an expert on travelers, I've long been puzzled about the thinking behind these travelers. I assume the designers believed their boat would always sail better with the boom out to leeward. My limited understanding is this will power up the mainsail, but reduce pointing. Or maybe designers just did this because other designers did it?
Does anyone know?