Re: Sailmaker's Superstitions

Originally Posted by
Todd Bradshaw
The biggest sailmaker's superstitions are (1) I'll make good money doing this (2) It won't tear up my knees and (3) sailors in general understand that the sail is their boat's motor, thus it should be a good one.
Hey Todd, While I agree that 1 and 2 are pretty far fetched superstitions based on some of my feeble attempts to designs sails, I think number 3 is actually an assumption that can be proven to be a fact. I quit racking my brain on sail designs because it is easier, maybe even cheaper, to buy decent used sails.
Oh, and I also learned, as the old adage goes, size DOES matter. But not in the way everyone is thinking now (get your minds out of the gutter). Too much sail area or too big a sail, and the boat is over powered and can capsize in a heavy gust before you can get it reefed. Too little sail area or too small a sail and it will take you what seems like a week to get across the lake in the hot summer sun. I know any old tarp or bed sheet will make a boat move, but if we are looking for performance or full potential of the boat, I think it does need to be a good one.
And as far as drawing the boat on a easterly heading, how do we figure that for those of us using a computer and CAD and design in 3D? I usually set the bow on the origin coordinates (x=0, y=0, z=0) and go from there so in the front view I am looking at the front of the boat, side view is the side of the boat (port or starboard depending on the view I select), the back is the stern, etc. I guess there is no room for superstition in CAD....
“If everybody is thinking alike, then somebody isn’t thinking.”
“You’re never beaten until you admit it.”
- General George Smith Patton