Moving on to my next set of questions!!! The boat got launched, Sunday was her first sail. And a nasty day too, 15-20kts, 3-5ft seas. Handles the wind fine, was single handed, so I kept off the wind mostly. I was pretty busy.Biggest complaint is all the weather helm. Could not let go of the tiller for a second. Not that it was snapping into the wind, but constant tugging no matter how far off the wind I went.Noticed that the rudder is not staying completely down. I changed to a new line when re-rigging. But the floating characteristic of the rudder and movement underway, make it kick out about 4-6 inches.How do I keep it fully down? Is there enough room to add another eye at the top of the rudder to get better tension on it? I'll bet when I look in there I'll see that the eye is straight up to the sheave, with no chance to put more tension on the line to hold the rudder down.I'd really rather not drill for making a pin.How do single handers manage the jib sheets when under way? Tending the leward jib winch doesn't seem very practical. I tried using the leward winch as a turning post, then across the boat to the windward winch, where I'm sitting and cleating it there. Sure makes for a messy cockpit.Thought I had done a good job of moving the mast forward by extending the backstay turnbuckles all the way out And tightening up on the forstay. Now that it's in the water, I see it didn't help at all. Still pretty raked. I'll find some sort of shackle to experiment with extending the backstay. Suppose I can only go forward so far before I run out of forstay turnbuckle adjustment.