Has anyone tried using the pentex jib that has battens, without the battens in it? wondering if it would hold it's shape or not. I'm trying to avoid buying the one with the vertical battens that is meant for furling.
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Re: Inter 20 jib question
[Re: TampaN20]
#100620 03/14/0701:09 AM03/14/0701:09 AM
Has anyone tried using the pentex jib that has battens, without the battens in it? wondering if it would hold it's shape or not. I'm trying to avoid buying the one with the vertical battens that is meant for furling.
TampaN20:
I don't know about the I-20. But i have had a Pentex reacher on my Hobie 17 cut by Bob Curry when he was with Sabre and is just now showing signs of stretching. It has little signs of wear. I just keep it inside when not using. May be headed your way.
Doug
Last edited by DougSnell; 03/14/0701:11 AM.
Re: Inter 20 jib question
[Re: TampaN20]
#100621 03/14/0707:26 AM03/14/0707:26 AM
I have never sailed without battens in the jib, but I think you will find that the leach will flutter pretty badly in any kind of breeze. I think the jibs have alittle bit of positive roach cut into them so if it is unsupported, they will probably want to curl or flutter. I think one of the other guys on this forum has sailed without the battens in the jib, maybe he can chime in... As far as shape goes, the furler jib has alittle more shape in the front while the battened jib is a little bit flatter (atleast that is how mine look). I like the furler jib for light air and the battened one for everything else. Alot of the battened I20 jibs I've seen have very little shape in the top of the sail (not that you can put much shape in up there), certainly less than the furling jib.
I'm guessing you want to furl a jib that has the horizontal battens in it?? This also depends on if you are racing or not?? I think it would definitely be slower and probably will not help the life of your jib if you do not have the battens. something else you could consider is having a local sailmaker put vertical battens into your jib. Probably wouldn't cost too much and will get you the same end result.
I sailed the last 2 days of Tradewinds this year with no jib battens. It didn't seem to negatively affect the sail shape at all. I believe Mike Krantz told me that he took the long batten out of his N20 jib sail as well (when he had an N20).
I think Todd is referring to me. I raced the 7.5 hour second day of last year’s c100 without two of the three Jib battens. They went missing on the previous 3.5 hours leg of the race. After leaving the beach I never noticed the lack of them. The wind was up then down, then non-existent, then current induced, and then back again. Try it.