Quote:
You need to travel out the main!! on the beach go sheet in hard then stand directly behind the boat if you cant see the mast you need to travel out til you do and sail it that way. The boat will perform like its supposed to! also with that much rake you might need to travel out the Jib a bit
Thanks but very puzzled.. "travel out the main!!" ????
like what is that you're saying? NOT have the main sheets car centered in the track? have the sail out from center?
Beach - check
sheet hard. check (sheet it hard with the sail where? centered on the boat?
Stand behind... If you can't see the mast? (at the top? at the bottom? the whole mast from tip to stem? wouldn't that depend on where the sail is positioned? AND how much wind is in the sail as it sits on the beach? No wind the sail will be flat - with wind the sail will have it's foil shape? so I'm completely puzzled as to what your saying.
"With that much rake" (how much rake - how do you know how much I have?) Travel out the jib? to where from where? My jib is always out left or right of the mast.
Really I just wondered if one over sheets - can it slow the boat? Or if one over rakes the mast, does it slow the boat? Also - when we tighten the jib (the 4 inches of recommend slack) that will pull the mast forward a bit from normal position. (where the side shrouds normally hold it) Now as we sheet in the main hard - I assume the mast pulls back (so that the front forestay once again becomes taught? the slack that the jib put in the forestay will be gone?
I've read you can rake the mast as low as you want - limited only by the space between aft boom and aft tramp area - the blocks between the boom and aft tramp/track would be the limiting factor... we can only rake back as much as the main blocks allow? since I now have the larger Hobie 18 6:1 on my 16... I don't think I could over rake the mast with this block setup? (surely the stock 6:1 low profile setup would allow the mast to rake back even more?