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#11
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![]() Pinning the gooseneck will result in *poorer* sail shape, and will more quickly distort a non-laminate sail material (probably also a laminate, but I don't have experience with those to say with certainty.
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The sliding gooseneck can allow a lower c of e; that was in fact part of the point of *not* switching to the fixed gooseneck. Jacklines or not is a personal preference, not related to the gooseneck type. And I believe you have very easy access to a sailmaker to confirm my statement regarding sail shape. Amgine Last edited by Amgine : 06-28-2007 at 08:28 AM. |
#12
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Fair leads, Brion Toss |
#13
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![]() Exactly. The only difference is the use of the Cunningham, which is an ingenious development to modify the shape of the sail on the fly but it creates a point load within the sail.
The sliding gooseneck has the same effect, but it spreads the load into the tabling rather than from a single point. All other points being equal, the gooseneck will result in slightly better shape and considerably less distorting loads within the sail. As for jacklines, can you explain why they would be required for a sliding gooseneck with a stop? For that matter, I removed them from my gaffer as well after adding a pair of small teak buttons in lieu of a table. There is no need for the boom to fall to the deck without halyard tension. |
#14
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In the one instance, the head is fixed and the gooseneck is moved; in the other, the gooseneck is fixed and the head moves. I don't see why the effect on the sail would be different. What am I missing? Jim Fulton |
#15
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Good question, and I think one at the heart of this discussion. When you tension the luff with the halyard, you just about unavoidably also tension the leach. How much of the halyard's effect goes to either side depends on point of sail, sheet, and vang, but you'd have to impose some very strange evolutions, like topping up the boom, to keep the leach from being affected. But when you tension the luff with a downhaul or a Cunningham, the luff is the only thing that is affected. In addition, tensioning the halyard has a diproportionate effect on the upper part of the sail, which is relatively small; tensioning from the tack flattens the belly of the sail. The consequences for sail shape are significant, but I don't question that tensioning the halyard works for you; in many or most circumstances there will be a net gain in performance, with a flatter sail more than compensating for some leach curl. But it ain't optimal. Fair leads, Brion Toss |
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