[Rhodes22-list] Fw: Jibbing
Saroj
saroj at pathfind.net
Tue Jul 6 12:50:31 EDT 2004
Dave's answer makes sense except for the fact that the very nature of an
accidental jibe precludes sheeting in the main. Laying at 45 degrees with
waves of water flowing in over the gunnels certainly does give a big
adrenaline rush, don't it.... How did you release the boom quickly? I
still haven't figured out the trick here..... seems to just "happen" after
some frantic pulling and yanking of this and that.
Roger gave me some good instructions on how to shorten my boom, so I plan on
doing that to permanently solve the problem.
Saroj
----- Original Message -----
From: "Robert Dilk" <Robert.Dilk at TRW.COM>
To: <david.walker5 at comcast.net>; <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2004 9:38 AM
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Fw: Jibbing
Ditto to Dave's answer.
I had an uncontrolled jibe in heavy wind and my boom lifted and became
trapped by the backstays. It was very exciting as the boat layed abeam to
the wind with the rail in the water until I released the boom.
Bob
S/V Knot Necessary
>>> david.walker5 at comcast.net 07/03/04 09:54PM >>>
Keith,
If you are running with the wind and have the main sheeted out, and you jibe
accidentally, the boom can rise enough to hit the backstay. The proper
solution to this when jibing is to sheet in hard before the jib and let out
the sheet quickly but under control after the jibe.
Another help is to use a vang to keep the boom down during down wind
sailing.
Dave Walker
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