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View Full Version : Gaff rig: The cutting edge?



Art Read
06-21-2008, 11:30 AM
Glancing through the various "contemporary" sailing mags, I can't help but notice an increasingly obvious trend in "state of the art" racing designs. Four sided mainsails. True, they have done away with the peak halyard and traditional "gaff", replacing them with rigid, full length "battens" incorporated into the head of the sail itself, but damnme if they don't look awfully familiar to this old traditionalist... Perhaps they've watched too many of our "unrated" knockabout gaff sloops and schooners walking away from them every time they cracked their sheets a bit and stopped beating their heads against a wall. The tyranny of rule inspired tiny mains and huge jibs may finally be at an end.

There's a reason why virtually every sailboat over twenty feet manufactured today requires a huge mechanical winch just to sail upwind. I used to sail an 80 foot schooner without a single winch aboard. No high tech travellers, cunninghams or hydrolic backstays either. Yet we consistantly managed to embarass modern "racing machines" who made the the mistake of giving us a "tickle" on a reach, and we made offshore passages that invariably recieved only sceptical grunts from "modern sailors" when we bragged in the bar at the other end.

It appears that the boating public is finally waking up to the fact that a "good" boat is one that works. Period. Racing "rating" rules, Madison Avenue marketing and product driven "gimicks" aside, the only boat you'll ever really love is the one that feels "right"...

Tom Hunter
06-22-2008, 12:41 PM
Art,

I believe you are correct about the advantages of the gaff rig.

But when it comes to the public realizing it? I don't believe you.;)

Captain Blight
06-22-2008, 03:49 PM
I can see how the shape is echoed the wing of planes like the Hawker Tempest. Obviously the most successful boats in the Tornado fleet have gone to a flat-headed main with lots of roach near the head of the sail. If only there were a way to get the shape of a topsail gaffrig without the gaff way up there, adding weight and disrupting airflow over the sail. It'll probably always be a rig for serious cruisers but that doesn't mean that continuing development should stop--a fast passage is a safe passage, or so we're told.

Michael s/v Sannyasin
06-22-2008, 04:20 PM
Some contemporary designers are embracing the gaff-rig. Here is a recent 40' schooner by Robert (Bob) Perry

http://www.jakatan.com/profile.jpg

http://www.jakatan.com/

Finnast Kind

Paul Fitzgerald
06-23-2008, 01:28 AM
Some contemporary designers are embracing the gaff-rig. Here is a recent 40' schooner by Robert (Bob) Perry

http://www.jakatan.com/profile.jpg

http://www.jakatan.com/

Finnast Kind

She is a wood boat too.

Michael Beckman
06-23-2008, 02:03 AM
I raced against Jakatan last summer in CRISR. I was on Martha. Definitely a modern design.. Didn't perform well in the light wind conditions of that week. Not sure how she'd do in heavier weather. Probably a bit better.