[Rhodes22-list] Higher winds

Robert Quinn rjquinn at bellsouth.net
Mon Jun 2 19:35:46 EDT 2003


Mark/Julie:  Kathy and I were out yesterday.  We ran up to Club Med under
the Genny alone- about four miles.  It was a very fast sail as the winds
were in the 20 to 25 MPH range.  Coming back down after dinner, we had both
the main and Genny up as the winds wound down a bit.  By the time we got
back to the marina we had the Genny furled to just over 100% and had great
movement and control.  We have the 150 and she does work well furled down.
Maybe not a race horse but she sails well.

With jus the Genny you may not be able to point as well as you would like
but we find that the performance is much better so if we have to make a
couple of extra tacks, so what?  We're out there to sail.

Many times we have found the boat to be underpowered with just the main
unless the winds are just right.  I don't know what that just right figure
is but I do know that right after we got the boat ten years ago a couple of
our best sailing days were under main alone.  We probably should not have
been out as we were screaming along having a ball.  Ignorance can be bliss
or just short of a disaster.

Sounds like you are putting your Chapman gained skills to good use.

Bob and Kathy on the "NoKaOi"
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Kaynor" <mark at kaynor.org>
To: "The Rhodes 22 mail list" <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Sent: Monday, June 02, 2003 4:10 PM
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Higher winds


> Slim,
>
> Yeah, that's what Julie and I tried to do during the race. When we got
home
> w/ consulted The Annapolis Book of Seamanship by John Rousmaniere. That's
> where we learned that sailing on the headsail alone is a viable option (at
> least in the wind we had yesterday) - we'd just never tried it. I like it
a
> lot better than sailing on the main w/ a scrap of jib.
>
> I also learned something else Saturday. We went out again on race day at
> around 5:00pm - the wind had died down and we just wanted a pleasant sail.
> We had both main and jib fully out when we got hit by a surprise 30+
gust -
> instant white caps w/ only about 100 yards of fetch from the shore. We
> furled the headsail and tried sailing on just the main. Every time a gust
> hit, the boat rounded up, regardless of what I did w/ the rudder. We got
> heeled over pretty badly and I dumped the main sheet, then was unable to
> head up enough to furl it. Every time I tried to pull it back in, we'd get
> hammered again. I finally started the motor and, at high RPMs, turned the
> motor and the tiller together to have enough power to get us headed up so
we
> could furl the main. It was amazing. I had the tiller hard to starboard
and
> the boat rounded up to port. Once we got the main furled we decided we'd
had
> enough and motored back to the marina. And the wind died and other folks
out
> on the lake continued sailing, the gust having missed them, apparently,
> probably wondering what had happened to us. But, I've got to say that not
> once during the entire day did I feel the Rhodes wouldn't be able to
handle
> it if I'd known what to do. We got back and, after we docked Julie patted
> the cabin top and said "I love this boat".
>
> Mark
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Steve Alm" <salm at mn.rr.com>
> To: "Rhodes" <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
> Sent: Monday, June 02, 2003 3:36 PM
> Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Higher winds
>
>
> > Mark,
> >
> > I've heard it said that the R22 is manageable in winds up to 27.  Beyond
> > that, well...you were there.  If it's gusting above 30, I bail out.  But
I
> > agree that we should all gain the experience of handling the boat, one
way
> > or the other, under those conditions.  I am surprised too that you were
> able
> > to point and tack with jib alone.  I usually opt for just the
> opposite--full
> > or somewhat reefed main and only a hanky of a jib.
> >
> > Slim
> >
> > On 6/2/03 11:19 AM, "Mark Kaynor" <mark at kaynor.org> wrote:
> >
> > > I'd be interested to learn how other Rhodies w/ IMF and furling head
> sail set
> > > their sails in windy, gusty conditions.
> > >
> > > We had our second regatta of the year last Saturday. At the start the
> wind was
> > > 18 gusting to 25. an hour later it was 23 gusting to 32, finishing up
at
> 17 to
> > > 23, gusting to 38. Friends who have been sailing on the lake for many
> years
> > > say they've never seen winds like these on the lake. Going from 17 to
a
> gust
> > > of 38 with a 20 degree shift will wake you right up!
> > >
> > > Five out of the fifteen boats that started finished the course. Three
> boats
> > > capsized (dinghies all - one Laser actually went over 6 times, but
> persevered
> > > and went on to finish - the other two were towed in), a J/22 lost a
crew
> > > member overboard (he was recovered safely in about 10 seconds by a
> nerarby
> > > coastguard auxiliary boat), a Seafarer 22's tiller snapped, a Catalina
> 22
> > > broached pretty dramatically on a spinnaker jibe in the first downwind
> leg,
> > > then continued on to finish. Two 1"x1/8" stainless straps that connect
> their
> > > tiller to their rudder cracked but did not fail completely, though
they
> will
> > > require replacement. A homemade canoe rig got swamped before the first
> mark
> > > and had to be towed in. One boat's headstay broke, and several other
> smaller
> > > failures also occurred on other boats.
> > >
> > > We didn't break anything on Raven. Julie and I completed the first leg
> (an
> > > exciting wing-on-wing downwind sleighride) and part the second
windward
> leg
> > > before deciding to drop out. We had the 135% genoa fully deployed for
> the
> > > downwind run to the first mark, then furled it and the main to
slightly
> more
> > > than 1/2 full just before rounding the first mark. We did okay, but
the
> gusts
> > > were making the main flog pretty badly, and it wasn't worth it to us
to
> > > continue if it meant ripping sails or breaking equipment. Several
other
> boats
> > > dropped out at this point, so we decided to quit and see if we could
> help some
> > > of the boats that were having real problems.
> > >
> > > We'd never sailed in winds much over about 20 mph. We knew the boat
> would
> > > handle them - we were the weak link, so we went home and studied up on
> it.
> > > Then we went back out again yesterday (17 gusting to 29) to experiment
> and
> > > mess around. We started w/ the 135% genoa about 2/3 out and no main.
We
> > > gradually deployed more genoa until we had it fully out, and got the
> main out
> > > to about 1/4. On a beam reach the gusts heeled us a bit, but at no
time
> was
> > > the boat out of control. It was a bit trickier on a close reach but
> still
> > > manageable, much more so than when the main was out 1/2 way or more.
> > >
> > > We were surprised to find that we were able to tack on just the jib
from
> close
> > > reach to close reach in about 110-115 degrees. With the main fully
> deployed
> > > we're generally able to do it in 90-100 degrees. The wind died a down
> bit (to
> > > 12-15 or so) and we fully deployed the main. While we had the main
fully
> out
> > > on a beam reach one of the highter gusts laid us down pretty well. We
> headed
> > > up, furled the main most of the way, fell off and continued.
Succeeding
> gusts
> > > powered us up well, but we didn't bury the rail again. When we came
in,
> we had
> > > a nice talk w/ the winner of Saturday's race. He suggested that we
also
> try
> > > fully deploying the main, but raise the boom a bit with the topping
lift
> to
> > > loosen the leech and let the main twist off up high. We're going to
give
> that
> > > a try next time we get a chance.
> > >
> > > Mark Kaynor
> > >
> > > __________________________________________________
> > > Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help? www.rhodes22.org/list
> >
> > __________________________________________________
> > Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help? www.rhodes22.org/list
>
> __________________________________________________
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>




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