I'm looking for advice going upwind. I've heard many sailors say that one should sheet in the main as hard as possible, implying that it can't be overdone. I sail a Spitfire, which has a fairly fat head, although not as extreme as this year's sails. I have noticed the boat stalls if I sheet too hard upwind. Is the 'block to block' advice outdated, related to pin heads, or just as good as it ever was? Does the downhaul come in to play at this point, to reduce the profile of the sail, as seen from the front, and hence reduce drag? But that would alo reduce power wouldn't it? Now you can see I am somewhat confused! Unfortunately I don't have another Spitfire to sail against at my club - but I love it! Simon
Simon Shadow 067
-- Have You Seen This? --
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: Simon]
#70792 03/30/0607:53 AM03/30/0607:53 AM
I find that it is a combo of sheeting in as much as possible - so I guess the "block to block" statement is correct- but also paying attention to the tell tales. Sometimes, however, you can never sheet in enough to get the windward tales streaming which probably means you need to foot off some.
Last edited by PTP; 03/30/0607:54 AM.
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: Simon]
#70793 03/30/0609:21 AM03/30/0609:21 AM
Get Rick and Mary's "Catamaran Racing" for the 90s. I seldom crank in my Hobie 18 magnum all the way unless the winds are around 25k and I'm starting to travel down. Ditto with the downhaul.
Wyatt
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: wyatt]
#70794 03/30/0609:40 AM03/30/0609:40 AM
block to block ... I've heard many sailors say that one should sheet in the main as hard as possible, implying that it can't be overdone.
Well we're not racing Hobie 16's here, but modern boat with real trim controls,
Oversheeting the modern mains can in some conditions kill upwind speed.
Pretty much you always went the squaretop to twist off a little bit. if it is in too far then you are just creating alot of tip vortex drag.
Pretty much you increase downhaul together with mainsheet. This keeps the twist profile the same while flattening the whole sail. This is fast in the right conditions.
Go over to the F16 forum and do a search on trimming and tuning the sails. Over the years we have covered this topics plenty of times. Spitfire sail trim should be very comparable to F16 sail trim.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: Simon]
#70796 03/30/0610:15 AM03/30/0610:15 AM
Don't get this book if you are really looking to make the boat go. The book is too generic to be of use. Yes, guys, I have the book on my shelved as well. The book does not deal with squaretop sails and does not focus on the interaction between downhaul, mainsheet, squaretop and prebend and this is exactly what you need to read and learn about to make the modern rigs go.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: Wouter]
#70797 03/30/0610:18 AM03/30/0610:18 AM
Don't get this book if you are really looking to make the boat go. The book is too generic to be of use. Yes, guys, I have the book on my shelved as well. The book does not deal with squaretop sails and does not focus on the interaction between downhaul, mainsheet, squaretop and prebend and this is exactly what you need to read and learn about to make the modern rigs go.
Wouter
There has to be a way you can say something like that without sounding so confrontational.
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: PTP]
#70798 03/30/0610:34 AM03/30/0610:34 AM
Wouter: You just can't help yorself. Is the Hobie 16 jab needed? Not that a low tech guy like me would understand any of this sail trim stuff, but I think you can stall any sail. (they splanes this in da book)
The book is a great book about sailing and racing. I refer to it every year and still find useful things to learn or refresh my memory.
I welcome you to come jump on a H16 and race 30 or 40 boats and show us how it's done. I'll find you a boat. With your superior knowledge, it should be easy.
Pat Bisesi
Fleet 204
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: pbisesi]
#70799 03/30/0610:47 AM03/30/0610:47 AM
Simon, As wouter says, fat top sails to not respond well to cranking lots of mainsheet on.
Having sailed a Spitfire around the IOW a couple of years ago in various conditions I have to agree with Wouter, you need to use Downhaul, mast rotation, traveller and mainsheet. Quick and simple guide.
Very Light wind.
moderate mast rotation, bit of downhaul to flatten the sail a little, moderate mainsheet tension (to try and keep the leach telltails flying)
Light wind.(only one or none trapping) Max mast rotation and mainsheet tension to keep the leach telltails flying.
moderate wind (2 trapping) move the mast rotation back a little to allow the leach to stand up some more, more mainsheet tenstion, increase downhaul and mainsheet tension as windspeed increases.
higher wind More downhaul, more mainsheet tension (but keep the leach tell tails flying), traveller out a little in the higher range.
Very windy max DH, ease traveller and play mainsheet.
At some point you may also want to move the plates up a little.
Fat top sails need care toget the best from them. Oversheeting kills them.
I have noticed the boat stalls if I sheet too hard upwind.
Simon - Block to Block works well on a Hobie 16 in the proper conditions . Obviously - if the above quote is correct - you should not do it on you boat. I don't know the Spitfire, but as Wyatt said (Hi Wyatt), you rarely (I thought never) do it on a H-18, for example. So block to block is not a standard. Try sailing a Stiletto block to block - you can't.
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: deq204]
#70801 03/30/0612:21 PM03/30/0612:21 PM
I have sailed several squaretop Formula 18s (Tiger, F18, Infusion). Those sails like a fairly stiff leech but it can easily be oversheeted so you have to pay attention. The top will stall first so you will have to sheet in to a stall then ease out to where the back telltails stream to see where the proper sheeting is for the wind conditions. I have found that even in very light winds the downhaul likes to be snugged on. This will open up the top as well. Not too much but it is something that you need to play with. The masts are getting bigger sections and that will throw another wrench into the mix...you will need to look closely at rotation.
Robbie Daniel (Tornado Olympic campaigner and winner of the recent Alter Cup on I20's) tells me to set the main more by looking at the leech shape than by watching tell tales. With boat on the shore, stand behind the boat on centerline looking up the leech with main sheet in hand. Sheet in until you see the leech of the sail standing up on centerline, then go a bit further. You'll see the leech hook past centerline (to windward). That is too far. Back off the centerline. Get to your normal helming position and view the leech shape. Try to burn this shape into your memory, as it's what you almost always need to achive going to weather. You will need more or less sheet tension to get there depending on wind strenght etc. You cannot just mark the main sheet at what looks like the right position, since the sail will need more sheet or less sheet under different wind strengths. I'm just beginning to use this technique...not sure if I've got it down perfect, but time will tell.
Another gem I picked up from the Charlie Ogletree at the Miami OCR last January...use the downhaul only as a gross adjustment to get enough power to fly the hull and not pop rapidly. Then, with the crew sheeting the main, adjust DH so crew only has to ease/sheet about one fore-arm's length with each puff to maintain the hull out the water. If you're popping up to quickly and needing to dump too much main, put on a little more DH. It takes some practise to have both crew & helsman coordinating/communicating and trusting who is going to respond to each gust, but when we get this technique right, we just scream up wind and the boat suddenly feels like it's on rails. Each puff squirts us forward instead of heeling the boat. Awesome!
Mike.
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: Tornado]
#70804 03/30/0602:19 PM03/30/0602:19 PM
Block to block is only good if the mast rake is perfect for the conditions.
Yes, learn to read the tell tails. I like to use leech tells for making the adjustment. The leech tails should not flow aft, they should hook, flow, hook, flow.
Take a look at this placement suggestion. This is for a Hobie 16, but is pretty generic to any sailboat.
Hey guys, thanks for some good posts. Two questions:
Scooby, you mentioned using max mast rotation for light wind (0-1 trapping) - I assume you meant max mast rotation for upwind setting? I guess that varies somewhat by boat design Where is it most commonly, the shrouds or front of daggerboard well?
Regarding reading main telltales, I assume that the advice given is only for sloop rigged boats? On my unirig H17 I use the upper and lower telltales on the draft of the sail (lower to set traveller and upper to set mainsheet) and haven't found the leech telltales all that useful (of course there's always the distinct possibility that I have no idea what I'm doing...). I also steer using the forward telltales in windshifts. So is it that with a jib, the main is always headed and as a result the forward telltales are irrelevant? Can you use just the leech telltales with a unirig, and if so how are they used? Using leech telltales with either unirig or sloop, how are you using them to independently trim traveller and mainsheet as is possible using upper vs lower forward telltales?
Jerry
Re: Block to Block, or By Feel?
[Re: rbj]
#70806 03/30/0603:52 PM03/30/0603:52 PM
Get "Catamaran Racing for the 90's". There is a whole chapter by Carlton Tucker on the Hobie 17 and he explains the telltales good. The book will also make you a VERY good sailor in less time that you can learn on your own.
I'm not saying at all that the suggested book is bad in any way, just that it has a limited use with respect to finding optimal trim with modern large squaretop mainsails. The book has a different intended usage, it gives a good generic method for sailing your catamaran, no matter what design specifics it has. As such it gives cat sailors a basis to expand their skills upon.
This expansion (on modern squaretops) is not really covered in the book, the author decided that this was outside of its scope. Nothing wrong with that. It just aims at a different usage.
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
Re: Allow me to clearify this ...
[Re: Wouter]
#70809 03/30/0604:32 PM03/30/0604:32 PM
Scooby, you mentioned using max mast rotation for light wind (0-1 trapping) - I assume you meant max mast rotation for upwind setting? I guess that varies somewhat by boat design Where is it most commonly, the shrouds or front of daggerboard well?
I mean as much as you can get - up to 90 degrees, i.e. the spanner poointing along the front beam.
In less wind you cannot have a sail this full going upwind, in more wind you need to de-rotate to ensure the leach of the mainsail stands up more.
Simon, would you say going up to 90degrees of rotation on teardrop shaped masts is a generic setting for very light wind conditions?
I agree that it will power you up, but the drag, the drag.. I prefer to pull on quite a bit of downhaul to flatten the sail in very light wind to reduce drag, and keep the mast less rotated than 90 degrees. Power to drag ratio is what keep you going in very light winds in my opinion.
Mike, about the downhaul thingy. We rarely sail in winds so stable that we can do what you describe, so the skipper runs the downhaul. Rule is that skipper use the downhaul to control power while crew controls the leech for pointing and fine-tuning power. Getting this right is very much like running downwind with the spi, teamwork and getting the feeling for it. If we goof it up, crew is responsible for letting out mainsheet to avoid a capsize and skipper waits as long as he dares before luffing up. When I study the video from Athens, I can only see the french team sail this way (skipper on downhaul), but perhaps the coverage of the other boats was in pretty stable wind.. I dont know, but Martin Strandberg advocated skipper on the downhaul in gusty wind. Neither the swedes or the french did too well in Athens