The main thing is that you don't want the tip of the pole bowed up, as the pole is weaker in this position and invites failure. It's OK if it's straight, but remember that everything on the boat stretches/bends when sailing under load (mast, hulls, lines/halyards, forestay/shrouds, sails, etc).



If you start out with a straight pole, when everything stretches it allows the pole tip to be bent up, weakening it. To prevent this, they are usually rigged so that the pole tip is bent downward a little when at rest, as a pre-compensation for the pole tip bending upward when under load.



You want enough "pre-bend" (downward), so that the pole never bends upward past the straight position.



All of the above is much more pronounced on hooter/reacher poles than on spinnaker poles, as the reaching sails are under much higher luff tension and sheet tension than spinnakers. The hooter pole on my previous P19 had maybe 5x the bending force of my current I20 pole. For more hooter info see http://www.whitecaps.net.



Sail fast and have fun,

Alan Thompson

I20 - San Diego