I just popped in and saw this post by John. Please allow me to add the little tid bits that I'm aware of. I'm certainly not of the same skill level as John, I will say that upfront. Still, I may have some info that we all can use.
... this mast was similar to the 'wing' ...
I really doubt it. Forgive me.
2nd mast rotation had a much greater effect on speed than spreader rake or prebend.
3rd pretty much the same rules applied to all the masts we used.
While true, both of these points do not help us. That the mast rotation has a far greater effect on speed than spreader rake of prebend doesn't mean that the effects of these last two things on speed is negligible.
That the same broad rules apply to all masts doesn't help us get that final 5 % of speed out our superwing rigs. For that you'll need specific info on how to optimize your mast and sail combo.
I write "mast and sail combo" here because that is were the final few % is a dependence on both. I can use the Goodall mast settings for my Redhead mainsail and complete turn it off. This when the right (redhead) settings can turn my (Redhead) motor on. This is my actual experience and I'm moving away from the Goodall/Ashby settings as a result.
4th the downhaul is a much more powerfull method of adjusting mast bend (and can be tuned to specific conditions) easily and effectively.
That is not entirely my experience. While true in (again) broad terms I personally found that having to pull too much downhaul (or too little) to correct for the wrong spreader rake and prebend settings was hurting my performance. You can indeed adjust your rig by pulling on the downhaul, even to a large extend, but there is no compensation for a wrong spreader/prebend settings. Especially not when your prebend is too much. How do you pull less on the downhaul then not at all ?
5th the only time that diamond tension made a significant difference to speed was when the windward diamond went slack.
Or when the diamonds are so tight that your prebend is way too much for the luff curve of your sail. Something that can easily happen with the superwing mast section as you sail with significantly less mast rotation then on other boats. Going to 80 degrees mast rotation angle to compensate for too much prebend is really not an option on the superwing masts as that will flatten your top too much. As the superwing is so flexible in the sideways direction you can NOT overrotate without sorting any negative effects in the top. What happens is this :
Say you have too much prebend for the given luff curve in your mainsail and your downhaul is already slack. Your top is however fine as that is not affected by the prebend setting. You feel that you are lacking power and pointing and in relation to a boat with perfect settings you are indeed lacking these. Now you try to increase your mast rotation to present the luff curve of your sail with the straight side of the mast (due to diamond wires that keep your mast straight in this plane). Now your lower section of your mainsail and the very important middle section will stand up and get more draft. However by overrotating the mast you present the more flexible side of the mast above the hound to the mainsheet tension running up the leech. Your top parts bends more and takes up the luff curve cut in the top section of your mainsail. Effect. You flatten out the top part and let the leech fall away there. Your pointing will increase somewhat, but less so than you would expect after optimizing your middle and lower parts. In addition, the other boats will double trapeze upwind while you are barely single trapezing. Your are now lacking power in the top to lift that luff hull and get that final bit of pointing and speed. You'll do better than before but still are uncompetitive in relation to an optimally tuned boat.
Again, I think John is right in the broad sense but for the final bit of performance gain the basic setting of spreader rake and prebend can be important.
I learned all this from my own experience. All things discussed above happened to me on my own boat. I was sailing with too much prebend in 2004 (result of having too much diamond wire tension) and could not outpoint a Hobie 16 if my life depended on it. I went through 4 different rake/tension settings since then and each time I got a performance improvement.
We found that most of the top Tornado sailors were using very different spreader rakes and diamond tension, but were all going along at virtually the same speed.
You will see the same thing in the Taipan and F16 classes. This is not because all masts vary heavily in stiffness or whatever, but more because different sailmakers make different mainsail designs. Each sailmaker will therefor produce a sail that prefers a different setup of spreader rake and diamond wire tension (among other things).
Why is this ?
Well because the basic setting is dependent on the assumed average downhaul tension and average mast rotation. Goodall and Ashby both design THE TOPS of their sails to set right with light to medium downhaul tension and a given rotation. The luff curve of the top of their mainsail is cut to suit these settings. There is not much you can do with the top of your mainsail, you lack the controls. So you adjust your spreader rake and prebend to get the middle (and also a little bit the lower) part of your mainsail to set right with these given downhaul tensions and mast rotation.
My own Redhead mainsail likes alot more downhaul then those of Goodall and Ashby. I compared setups with Taipans and I'm running alot less prebend now (4th experiment with rake/prebend settings). Reason, redhead has cut the luff curve in the top of my mainsail rather round. So the top is rather full when presented with a normal mast rotation setting. Also my top is quick to hook to windward, which is very draggy. To compensate I have too options; increase mast rotation or crank on the downhaul a little more. The first presents the more bendier side to the sail and makes the top bend more under leech tension. The second bends the top more for the given mast rotation. I choose downhaul as too much rotation is slow on the taipans and because I was running so little downhaul that I had creases in my mainsail along the mast. However this is not the end of it. By pulling harder on the downhaul I also bend my mast more at the spreaders. To SOME extend the bending due to downhaul and prebend can be added to oneanother; it is actually a bit more complex but this is accurate enough for now. So I need to run less prebend to get back at the optimal mast curve for the given luff curve cut in the middle of of mainsail. And this is exactly what I running now. I only run 25 mm prebend while Ashby and Goodall advice 40 mm to 50 mm.
So this large difference between my setup and that of others can largely be attributed by the different way Redhead and Goodall/Ashby cut the luff curve in the tops of their sails.
My advice to you would be to put you spreader rake in the middle of the settings reccomended by the good sailors (Greeg Goodall says 40-65mm I believe.
My advice here is to just e-mail Glenn Ahsby (We're talking about your ashby sail here, right Eric ?) and ask him for which rake and prebend the luff curve was cut. Start there and then do some personal fine tuning for your local dominant conditions.
I did that with Redhead and found out that he cut my mainsail for a 20-30 mm prebend and a 20-30 mm spreader rake. As you can tell this is noticeably different from the Goodall (Taipan ) settings. When using the Goodall settings I was noticeably lacking height and speed.
Then I would set my diamond tension so that when trapezing and with max downhaul the windward wire is just tight, this will make the maximum power for your sail available to you.
If your luff curve is pronounced in the middle then this advice my lead to sailing with to little prebend and thus a middle part of the sail that has too much draft and a tight leech. This is often less damaging then too little draft and a loose leech but it is still sub optimal. You will often have good pointing but you also max out on boatspeed a bit earlier than others.
I would then forget about spreader rake and diamond tension except for very heavy winds.
Finding the right prebend (average) for both medium and light winds was a bit performance boost for me personally. Johns methode will get you in the ball park for sure but for the final few % performance you will need to look for the optimal setting between the given luff curve of your mainsail and your mast. It can be that more prebend than what you find with John method is better.
I would set mast rotation so that it is at max power (for us it is pointing at the shroud, the tips page on the AHPC site says 50 to 60 degrees, this becomes the base setting and is used in all conditions apart from heavy winds and very light >5 knots windspeed.
The approach that is working for me is finding the mast rotation angle that properly sets the top of my mainsail for the average mainsheet and downhaul tensions. These three things are heavily interacting with eachother on the superwing mast. Much more than I found on saw Hobie Tigers etc. Especially when you are sailing with an entlarge squaretop. I'm finding that a smooth transition between mast and sail (on the lee side) is of no particular concern on the superwing masts. Or at least at times I found better speed when I derotated the mast past this aerodynamic point.
The super depower setting make sense to me, although I have not sailed with such a setting. But the slack windward wires would lower the stiffness of the mast in the sideways direction which will allow the mast to bend more in the middle thus flattening out the middle of the sail and letting the middle leech fall away. The top is then still presented with the more flexible side of the mast and is alo bending alot make the top flat and letting the leech fall away. All in all you would be sailing with rather flat sail (small draft) and a open leech. Both will spill power while you can maintain a stiff mainsheet which keeps you forestay taught = flat jib and maintains acceptable pointing.
Didn't Landenberger advice a similar adjustment for the really strong winds ?
Wouter