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Tampilkan postingan dengan label peaked. Tampilkan semua postingan

High peaked Gaffs

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Some of you may have noticed that all of my gaff sail plans have a short hoist (luff) and a long, high-peaked gaff. To many, this is a somewhat strange-looking shape compared with the more commonly seen longer luff, shorter and lower peaked gaff.

Pegasus 18.5

So, why do I do it that way?

The main reason is to keep the mast as short as possible. This may not be such an issue in a boat which sits on a mooring, but for a trailer boat, every inch you can remove from the length of the mast is important. Added length in the gaff means reduced length in the mast - although there are diminishing returns, as the peak halyard needs to intersect the gaff at as close to a right-angle as practical. This is so that the gaff stands well, with minimum sag, when under a weight of wind - in the process reducing twist in the sail. The result is that the mast needs to project quite a distance above the gaff jaws, and a quick glance through your boat books will show that many designers and builders make the mast too short above the jaws, and the halyard then works at a very inefficient angle. This is one of the reasons that gaff rigs have a bad name for windward work.

The second reason for my use of long, high-peaked gaffs is that the light, flexible gaff tends to bow around the halyard attachment point when the wind gusts, automatically flattening the sail at just the right time. Also, by tweaking the peak halyard, you can produce very effective sail shape adjustments when changing point-of-sail, or during varying wind conditions. The high-tech racing boats spend hundreds of thousands doing this with carbon-fibre and stainless steel - here we can do it (in a cruder, but effective way) using home-made wooden spars and a bit of line.

I frequently draw a tiny, short-luffed jib for these rigs. The short luff and small sail area means that the little sails stand well, even though the masts have no shrouds or backstays of any sort. However, the effect of the jib is remarkable, as it smooths the airflow around the section of the sail attached to the bulky , turbulence-inducing mast. The jibs are so small that the rig can be used with, or without the jib, and will still balance well.
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Harbinger and the High Peaked Gaff

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It is with direct relevance to two of my recent postings (High-peaked Gaffs and Building Phil Bolgers Harbinger) that I show the picture below.


This shot is of Harbinger just moments after pushing-off from the launching.? It may appear that the motor is dragging, but in fact it is just ticking over (Honda 2hp Air-cooled 4-stroke) so as to be ready for emergency use in getting out of the marina. That is me you can see standing at the tiller, concentrating intensely - both of the owners were on-board and I was unfamiliar with the boats handling characteristics.

The point is that the photo shows two things - Harbinger is a beautiful design, and more importantly, you can see how the combination of a short hoist (luff) and a long, high-peaked head gives one a really versatile rig. Even in the light conditions, it is apparent that the gaff is bending nicely under the tension of the peak halyard. I guess that it could have been released a little to get more draft into the sail, but we didnt know what conditions would be like outside, and the sail and lacing were all brand-new and unstretched. For the record, we didnt need the engine, and the boat sailed superbly - just look at the curl of water coming off the forefoot!
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