Reducing weather helm
Buying a larger jib to reduce weather helm may not always be the easiest route. Larger sails (wether jibs or mains)tend to produce more heel for a given set of conditions and more heel translates into more weather helm for most hull shapes. Also, genoas or yankees well above 100% carry more of their sail area behind the center of lateral resistance (CLR) and could perhaps start contributing to weather helm that way. Therefore, it may be useful to briefly review the other measures that can be taken to reduce weather helm, even though there have been countless threads on the subject over the years.(1) DEPOWERING THE MAIN by moving the draft forward (mast bend & luff tension), making it flatter, letting the top third twist off ( allowing the boom to rise), changing the angle of attack (letting the traveler out or pinching) or reefing down (caution: sometimes a first reef has more belly than a full main).(2) MAST RAKE & BALLAST Rake the mast forward (not possible with some rig types)and make sure that the stern is not too heavy thereby causing the vessel to squat. Move ballast (dead or living) out of the stern and towards the windward side, whenever possible.(3) Since POWERING UP THE JIB can be a two-edged sword (as discussed in the first paragraph) one should try to power up without increasing heel while keeping the jib's center of effort as far forward and as low as possible (in this regard, the effect of lengthening the bowsprit by a few inches is sometimes worth a try).IMHO, the vast majority of excessive weather helm complaints among cruising vessels are caused by old, blown-out mains that cannot be properly flattened, thereby causing too much heel and too little drive (remember: at lower boat speeds the rudder powers down and larger rudder angles are needed to achieve the same steering effect). The second most common problem among cruisers is squatting caused by too much weight in the stern (notice the davits, dinghies, outboards, solar panels, wind generators plus a zillion other items hanging of the sterns of typical cruising vessels). Daysailers tend to be less heavily loaded with "stuff" but maybe hampered by lots of heavy passengers gravitating towards the lee side of the cockpit - rather than sitting near the beam on the windward rail - of many daysailers).Have funFlying Dutchman