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Not sure what you mean. I use the cunningham for the reef luff control and, yes, it also allows you to modify the draft of the main as well. I use dog bones in the luff cringle and a hook on the cunningham. I actually thought most racing folks still do something like this. I do not try to do all reefing from the cockpit as I generally find it simpler to just go do it up there.That's a really old drawing. It's for a boat without internal reefing lines, and no provision for leading reef lines back to the cockpit, as is common nowadays.
A Cunningham was/is for moving the draft of the mainsail. It really would be awkward to try to use it for the reef luff. Did this boat not have a halyard winch, and need a tackle to retighten the luff? The boom shown doesn't even have the reef horns that were common even back then.
Re the angle of the reef line, I don't think there's any doubt it should be vertical. That why the cars were moveable. But the bowline-loop falls in place automatically, or can be moved there with a finger.
Those sketches were a work of art, no? Lovely to look at. I find this one really confusing.
I find it near impossible to heave-to on my E32-2Yesterday when practicing heaving to for the first time, with double reefed main and 80% of the #1 jib, in just 15-20kn I was still averaging 2kn with what seemed like very little side slip.
I assumed it would 'park' more (and drift more) and although probably most folks wouldn't care, in the often narrow waterways of Puget Sound, 2kn seems a little quick.
Should I expect to be able to learn to tune it to slower than 2kn or is that about expected for an E38 in 15-20kn?
FWIW, I think my reef points are at 15% and 32%, more common for offshore sailing, so my double reefed main looked pretty dang tiny to me and kept my speed mostly in the 4-5kn range all day, only once hitting 7kn on the reach home.
We each have our own options and I have never sailed a boat with a Tides track. But I my cunningham is a reefing hook on a 6 purchase set of small Harken blocks that is aft led to the cockpit. I work this frequently as the windspeeds vary. I can adjust it easily with one hand even with the sail under pressure. I have used this arrangement on every boat I have owned from my old Ranger 23 racing days to present (even my Folkboat!) passage making on my Tartan 37. Not sure why I would want to get involved with adjusting the weight of the whole main to tweak the shape a bit--seems more effective to adjust the shape from the bottom--, but we all have adopted the things that have worked for us and how we use our boats. It might be a racing carry over. Unless things have recently changed, this arrangement was on every racing boat I crewed. While I have seen them on goosenecks that are on a track, my experience suggest there are other reasons for this arrangement. Small adjustment of luff tension seems to make a significant difference in speed, particularly in varying winds.Maybe I'm spoiled by Tides sail track, where it's easy to tension the entire luff using a halyard winch. Pulling on the luff in two directions is just not necessary.
I reef entirely from the companionway now, with permanent luff downhaul lines that eliminate even the need for horns or hand attachment of dog bones. No Cunningham hook aboard.
Oh wow, Christian, that's a surprise, given your extensive sailing!I have to smile at our different style. In 20 years on cruising boats I have never given a second thought to tweaking the draft of the mainsail. My outhaul position is also unchanged in 20 years. Pure unadulterated laziness! (Also probably not easy to do with my 10-ounce offshore main.)
Carlton Mitchell I think it was who said he always cruised at 80 percent racing efficiency. I am clearly in the single digits.
Carlton Mitchell I think it was who said he always cruised at 80 percent racing efficiency. I am clearly in the single digits.
And you eschew dodgers. I would not cruise a boat without one because I am a wimp about being cold and wet. I change my outhaul but infrequently So it is style difference.I have to smile at our different style. In 20 years on cruising boats I have never given a second thought to tweaking the draft of the mainsail. My outhaul position is also unchanged in 20 years. Pure unadulterated laziness! (Also probably not easy to do with my 10-ounce offshore main.)
Carlton Mitchell I think it was who said he always cruised at 80 percent racing efficiency. I am clearly in the single digits.