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#1
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| Learning to sail a Balance Lug I will be embarking on a boat building project soon. Although all my limited sailing experience has been on Bermudian sloops, I'm leaning towards a balance lug for this boat. The plans are made for it and from what I've read it sounds good for a 15' daysailor that will be used solo often. Although I've found much about the pro's & con's of balance lugs vs other sail plans, I haven't had much luck finding info on the basics of sailing a BL. When the big launch day comes (months & months away yet), it would be nice to have a clue of what I'm supposed to do! Don't have any friends with one, so hands-on learning might be limited. Any suggestions on books, web-sites, etc? |
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#2
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| John Leather's book Spritsails & lugsails. |
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#3
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| If you don't get the answer here, try www.woodenboat.com forum. You'll find some guys over there who use lugsails on regular basis - they will surely be able to give you some good hints. |
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#4
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| Try googling "balanced lug rig" It is one of the easiest rigs to handle.
__________________ "Boats are like rabbits; you can have one boat or many, but you can't stop at two" - A. Onassis Boat designs: "a convoluted collection of discontinuous compromise" - Par ". . . ere the end, some work of noble note, may yet be done . . ." -Tennyson Dances with Turkeys |
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#5
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| Time on the water! Like most things, theory is great but practice is one hell of a lot better. Just do it. It really helps if you develop simple metrics for measuring your progress - timing a known course etc. Seeing how changing rig setup affects actual Velocity Made Good (VMG) by comparing results to previous efforts makes a huge difference. It really helps to log your settings and results so you can review things over time and see what works. The problem with theory is that your particular boat has it's own "sweet spot", and doing what works for someone else may not be the right thing for you. Enjoy your boat and learn what makes it go fast the fun way. Turn off the computer and get on the water! -- Bill |
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#6
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| They are OK. I have sailed plenty of small boats and canoes with them. You have a good and a bad tack. The bad being the one the sail lays on the mast.
__________________ Gonzo |
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#7
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| Google Goat Island Skiff. There are instructions on how to tune a balanced lug. |
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#8
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| It should be no different than sailing a Bermudan rig. In fact it should be easier. Check out to see a lot of boats rigged with that type of sail. The Balance Lug is one of the two most popular sail types in the Puddle Duck fleet. It is runing neck and neck in popularity with the Bermuda like Leg-o-Mutton rig. The trick is to not have the boom and yard extend too far past the mast, and to have a hold down line attached to the boom right next to the mast to keep the boom from rising. A lot of these sails were built by the skippers, who have never built a sail before, and used successfully, even though they have never sailed before.
__________________ ...I never learned a thing from an argument I won... |
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