Rolling in the genoa can help alot with weather helm. Weather helm is caused from two things when the wind is brisk:John383 wrote:Thanks for the thoughts on Main trim...I wish it were that simple! This is not a subtle tug on the tiller, when I say "weather helm", rather this is a real struggle when the wind picks up. I have a new main, and trim makes no significant impact (unless of course one lets the main out so far that it basically is non -functional)...
so, I appreciate the suggestions but this problem is not main trim- perhaps raking the mast forward will help, perhaps not (I think it might impact this slightly) but I suspect this is a boat that will need to be sailed in brisk wind with an early reef and a big jib. Would be good to hear from other Ty Sr owners, tho....
Thanks again
JW
1. Pressure on the main trying to round up the boat is a small portion of it
2. The other big thing is the hull shape in the water when the boat heels over.
When the boat is heeling too much and the keel is sticking out sideways, it has friction and is acting like a lever trying to turn the boat into the wind, with the lee side offering very little resistance, meanwhile the main is trying to push the lee side forward. So when the boat is set up right, you will have a weather helm. This will increase with the boat's heel angle since the keel moves father and farther out to windward and the drive from the sails moves father and farther to lee. The drive from the genoa or jib is also on the lee side.
Normally on a sloop the first thing you reef is the genoa down to a working jib size as Cathy stated. And typically you'd reef for the gusts. The next is take a reef in the main, etc...
The whole idea of reefing is not to try to keep the boat from having weather helm when it's 45' on it's side, but rather to keep the angle of heel from getting that bad in the first place, which causes the weather helm.
I would experiment with reducing the sail in a balanced fashion to keep the boat heeled no more than 20' or so with the sails set properly for the wind direction and see how she does before I go through all the monkey motion of moving the mast forward and aft. Racers will do that to try and get every ounce of speed out of thier boats, but if you are only moving the mast an inch or two, it's probably not going to make much of a difference to regular folks. Remember, just because the boat is heeling more doesn't mean it's going faster.
Good luck and fair winds!
-Dave
PS: 45 degrees may be an exaggeration to how you're actually sailing her but I was trying to get the point across of alot of heel.