| Making your own sails #132499 02/20/08 02:44 AM 02/20/08 02:44 AM |
Joined: Jan 2007 Posts: 129 Netherlands Genealex OP
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Posts: 129 Netherlands | I'm thinking of making my own sails, guess I'm not the only one toying with this thought. I hope to profit from the experience of others, to be able to make informed decisions whether to go ahead with it or not, and how to go about it. I've found two interesting threads http://www.catsailor.com/forums/showflat...=true#Post63203 and http://www.catsailor.com/forums/sho...;amp;page=0&fpart=1&vc=1 on this forum . I'd like advice about sail design resources: good books, websites, design software. Which skills are needed, what tools are absolutely necessary, which ones are nice to have but not essential. What are the pros and cons of different designs, materials and construction methods. Which suppliers can you recommend. I'd be glad to hear from anybody who has any thoughts and experience on this matter. | | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#132501 02/20/08 05:53 AM 02/20/08 05:53 AM |
Joined: Oct 2006 Posts: 119 Bernhards Bay, N.Y. popeyez7
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Posts: 119 Bernhards Bay, N.Y. | ''Art & science of sails''~~~~Amazon.com..under books 22.95 by Tom Whidden & Mike Levitt
~~Don't fear the ''SPEED''~~ Fear the''ADDICTION'' ~17,18 Hobies, ~Jet boat~Speedster 150 ~2 Kayaks~ ~~~~VIETNAM VET. 69-71~~~~
| | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: Genealex]
#132502 02/20/08 10:20 AM 02/20/08 10:20 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD Keith
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Posts: 1,459 Annapolis,MD | Here's also a great place to start - Sailrite Kits, materials, sewing machines, etc. You just may find a kit for what you're trying to do. | | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: Genealex]
#132504 02/20/08 11:19 AM 02/20/08 11:19 AM |
Joined: Nov 2005 Posts: 1,203 uk TEAMVMG
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Posts: 1,203 uk | Get a decent sail and copy the individual panels, then all you are learning is sticking the thing together and not trying to develope a clever shape at the same time.
P
Paul
teamvmg.weebly.com
| | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#132507 02/20/08 01:57 PM 02/20/08 01:57 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe Wouter
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Posts: 9,582 North-West Europe | Actually, their is no "intellectual property" protection when such is used in combination with an object that is for your own use only.
"Intellectual property" only limits the economic exploitations of it.
So as long as you don't sell copies or use them to settle debts then everybody is free to copy anything, irrespectibally of patents awarded or designations of "intellectual property".
Wouter
Wouter Hijink Formula 16 NED 243 (one-off; homebuild) The Netherlands
| | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: tami]
#132510 02/20/08 03:38 PM 02/20/08 03:38 PM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway Rolf_Nilsen
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Posts: 4,451 West coast of Norway | You are of course right Wouter, that was why the "stealing" was in quotes.
We have hand cut some sails from the bottom up. Hand cutting panels is tedious and time consuming, but if you are short on money it is a good way to reduce costs. If you want to learn more about sails, shapes, design etc. it is a great thing to do. You will not get it right the first time, so you will have plenty opportunity to do re-cuts and modifications. You will also learn about what kind of loads there really are on beachcat sails. Dont expect to do the first sails in a night though.. Assembling a pre-cut kit is much simpler and still a challenge the first time you have a go at it.
As for sewing machines, I did my first homebuildt sails on an old Pfaff with no walking foot. I bought a grommet tool from Sailrite with some of their nickel grommets. These grommets dont take the same loads a real steel grommet does, but you really dont need them to if you are a bit creative. For the mainsheet on a mainsail you stitch a webbing loop to the sail instead. For the downhaul, you install one of the sailrite grommets and reinforce it with a web loop at the top. For the halyard grommet there are similar things that can be done. The same goes for luff ropes etc. There are always ways to improvise and get a good result if you really want to.
A domestic sewing machine is all you need if you go with Maxx or Flexx cloth. For dacron it can be a bit of a stretch, but there are certain tricks you can try. Dont expect the sewing machines owner to like them <img src="http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
Tami is right of course, but you need to learn some things on yourself. We plan to build no less than three suites of sails for our boats this spring.
If you start the project and want whatever advice I can give, just keep the thread alive. There are others here who also know a lot about the topic. There are several sailmakers in the Netherlands so you should be able to buy what you need locally. Perhaps you even can make a deal with a sailmaker and have him cut the panels for you. | | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#132511 02/20/08 10:16 PM 02/20/08 10:16 PM |
Joined: Jan 2005 Posts: 169 Santa Barbara CA sbflyer
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Posts: 169 Santa Barbara CA | For starting somewhere, I'd say a cat sail is a good place, the loads aren't too high, usually no reef points, loose foot is one less bolt rope to stitch, and you generally aren't going out to the middle of the ocean where your life sort of counts on it. Plus you can compare it side by side with sails of known speed potential and see if you're getting anywhere on shape...on the machine side again, it really helps to have the special foot attachments like the assymetric one for getting tight up against the bolt rope, and maybe a folder for the edging. On the jib, are you going to do hanks or zipper luff? It's hard to sew the two sides of the zip so they are both the same length when you are done, as it has to be separated during sewing. Maybe we should get a whole sewing sticky going...
Last edited by sbflyer; 02/20/08 10:18 PM.
| | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: Genealex]
#132513 02/21/08 12:28 PM 02/21/08 12:28 PM |
Joined: Nov 2005 Posts: 1,203 uk TEAMVMG
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Posts: 1,203 uk | no need to take it apart, just flatten out and trace each panel individually.
Paul
teamvmg.weebly.com
| | | Re: Making your own sails
[Re: TEAMVMG]
#132514 02/21/08 01:06 PM 02/21/08 01:06 PM |
Joined: Jan 2005 Posts: 169 Santa Barbara CA sbflyer
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Posts: 169 Santa Barbara CA | After tracing the panels, you're going to have to compensate for the shrinkage caused by the stitching, if you just resew them as is you'll end up with a smaller sail, that might be skewed depending on the bias of the original cloth, different thread tensions on the original machine,etc. How much to compensate? Welcome to the core question that separates having ideas about sails from actually making them... Just for an example, everybody in the hang gliding industry had to go to temperature controlled lofts, if you sewed one half of the sail one day and the other half later, it would be slightly off from the other side, you could never see it by eye, but you could sure feel it in flight as one wing would keep trying to fly ahead of the other one in a way that was hard to tune out...you could also fly different gliders of the same model, and even tuned the same one of them would just fly "wrong" somehow...
Last edited by sbflyer; 02/21/08 01:41 PM.
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