| Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#21117 06/18/03 10:40 AM 06/18/03 10:40 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 833 St. Louis, MO, Mike Hill
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Posts: 833 St. Louis, MO, | Try sheeting your main harder. Sheet your main in and steer up with it until the top leeward teltale starts to break. Then let out an inch and sail it. If your crew weight is high this will also effect pointing ability.
Whatever you do don't try to point with other boats. People always ask me how I get my boat to point so high. I always say that I never try to point. I'm always looking to foot. In other words pointing high comes naturally with going fast. The faster you go the higher you point.
Mike Hill H20 #791
Mike Hill N20 #1005
| | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#21119 06/18/03 12:16 PM 06/18/03 12:16 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Alec, I too am having the same kind of problems. Nigel Pitt gave me some pointers a while back and said that you can't try and point this boat. That big jib just won't do it. "You gotta let the big dog eat". Besides the major points in the tuning guides, I've since found that getting the boat bow down upwind helps a lot and keeping the jib slot open is critical. I've raked the mast all over the place and STILL can't feel much difference. I've been relatively competitive with the 6.0's I've raced against so far but I too am getting schooled by Hobie 20's around the buoys. In my defense, my sails have something like 1700 miles on them (x-worrell sails at least once and the previous owner and I have sailed the snot out of 'em). However, I have a new set sprawled across my pool table as we speak and I'll let you know how that turns out! There's a tuning guide on catsailor by Jamie Diamond you might want to look at and you may want to join the N6.0NA forum as well. Links below: Jamie Diamond tuning guide Yahoo N6.0 group
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#21120 06/18/03 12:53 PM 06/18/03 12:53 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California John Williams
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Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California | Bow down - my skipper and I are right at minimum, and in light to medium air, we're sheeted right (not just tight) and our weight is forward. Give the leeward bow a good aggresive angle, and like Mike and Jake said, use that big jib to your advantage. When you're in the jib and it's drawing well, the combo of apparent wind and the boards will put you up where you need to be.
Good luck - coming to Nationals?
J
John Williams
- The harder you practice, the luckier you get - Gary Player, pro golfer
After watching Lionel Messi play, I realize I need to sail harder.
| | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: Mike Hill]
#21122 06/18/03 04:58 PM 06/18/03 04:58 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Doesn't going faster make your apparent wind direction change to more on the nose? This would mean the faster you go, the less high you can point - right?
There's a sweet spot between boat speed and pointing ability that will get you to A mark faster for any given boat. I'm pretty sure that sailing faster will not help you point higher.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: SoggyCheetoh]
#21124 06/18/03 07:22 PM 06/18/03 07:22 PM |
Joined: Aug 2002 Posts: 396 Annapolis Md. LuckyDuck
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Posts: 396 Annapolis Md. | Hey Alec. Just had to laugh, your first response was from a H-20 driver. Sage advice.
Still hazey after all these beers. F-16 Falcon #212
| | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: LuckyDuck]
#21126 06/19/03 09:48 AM 06/19/03 09:48 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 833 St. Louis, MO, Mike Hill
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Posts: 833 St. Louis, MO, | Hey Alec. Just had to laugh, your first response was from a H-20 driver. Sage advice. I had to look up "Sage advice" to see if I was being slammed. "Proceeding from or marked by wisdom and calm judgment: sage advice. " Heck, I'll take that. Mike Hill H20 #791
Mike Hill N20 #1005
| | | Try Speed Testing!
[Re: BlowMe]
#21127 06/19/03 10:08 AM 06/19/03 10:08 AM |
Joined: Mar 2002 Posts: 3,355 Key Largo, FL and Put-in-Bay, ... RickWhite 
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Posts: 3,355 Key Largo, FL and Put-in-Bay, ... | There is really no way you can improve boat speed without relativity to another boat. You have gotten a lot of advice -- a lot of it may be right. But, I don't believe there is any magic place to set your main or jib. Everything is relative to the wind, the seas, your crew weight.., in other words, the old Three W's of Wind, Water and Weight. That is where Speed Testing comes in. In my latest book, "Sailing Drills:" there is a section on Speed Testing. Basically, you need at least two boats. One boat must stay the same no matter what -- you need a constant. You should line up so that one boat does not affect the other's wind. Then sail for about two minutes and determine if one boat went faster and by how much, and one boat sailed higher and by how much. Record that and do it over and over until you have established an average.
Now experiment with changes on one of the boats.., should be the one that is performing worse. You can try jib lead positions, mast rotation, mast rake, sheet tension, and even different styles of sailing. But, be sure to try only one at a time and try it a number of times to get realistic data. If the winds are fluky, forget about it -- try it on another day when the winds are pretty steady. By the way, the data you would be gathering would be valuable ONLY for that wind, water and weight condition. Keep that in mind.
I know we spent close to a week here in Key Largo a number of years ago tuning the N6.0NA and came up with some pretty good numbers. Then folks started sailing with a more radical aft mast rake and our numbers went out the window. Sorry to say we never Speed Tested again after that to find the new magic numbers.
Also, the "loose nut on the tiller" could be a problem. Some folks are pinchers.., and others are footers. A good way to find out which you are is to try my "Eyes Closed Drill." Simply go out sailing with another similar boat and get in what you think is your groove. Once there the Skipper closes his or her eyes and sails by feel. You are only eliminating of you senses -- you still have 4.., or maybe 5 in some cases, left. Use them. Feel the wind in your hair on your arms, feel the waves, the heeling of the boat, listen to the telltales tickle on the sail, etc. After sailing for about 5 minutes, relate how you are doing with the other boat. One boat may be much higher (pincher) and the other much lower (footer). In my Sailing Seminars I do this drill with the entire class and find it amazing the differences in helmsmanship. Once you discover you are a natural footer, practice working on going higher. If you discover you are a pincher, practice driving off and getting more speed.
To give you exact place to put your jib settings, how must mast rake, how hard you sheet, etc. would be impossible to do in this armchair position we are all sitting in right now. It takes work.
Generally, I will say this. The first day of every seminar I try to espy general sheeting of each boat. I would have to say that usually 90 to 100% of the students are not sheeting the main enough. The 90% is exact, and once in a while I will get a student that understands you need to sheet the main much harder than the jib. But, that is rare. Of course, as mentioned in previous posts, you can't sheet in tight until you get flow across the boards and rudders. Once that flow is established, you can sheet the main very hard in most cases. Most folks err in the direction of losing gobs of power by not sheeting enough. So, in essence, with your main not sheeted too tight, you are powering up (in 2nd gear), but not pointing very well. Once there is flow across the boards, you can sheet in and flatten out the sail (shift to high gear).
At any rate, Good luck Rick | | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: Mike Hill]
#21129 06/19/03 10:29 AM 06/19/03 10:29 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California John Williams
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Posts: 3,293 Long Beach, California | iro-ny, n. use of words to express the opposite of what one really means.  I think his comment related to the original post being about how the guy's getting dogged by H20s around the marks and you chimed in, albeit with good advice, but with "Hobie 20" proudly in your signature block. I got a grin out of that, too.  The good-natured battle between between the 6.0 and the H20 continues! J
John Williams
- The harder you practice, the luckier you get - Gary Player, pro golfer
After watching Lionel Messi play, I realize I need to sail harder.
| | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: carlbohannon]
#21132 06/19/03 11:06 AM 06/19/03 11:06 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | 1) Watch for the jib back winding the main. When you see it ease off. Back winding you can't really see hurts. Try adding a tell tail to the main ~ 1/3 of the jib height up and 12-18 inch aft of the mast.
Carl, You lost me with the tell-tale to detect that you're backwinding the main. I would certainly welcome some sort of tool to indicate this condition but I don't understand how the extra tell-tale can do it.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Pointing on a Nacra 6.0NA
[Re: Keith]
#21135 06/19/03 12:35 PM 06/19/03 12:35 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | the 6.0 has a 4 way jib car adjustment with the cable running across the trampoline. I can't imagine having to use the barberhauler upwind because there is already so much adjustment - does anyone do this on their 6.0?
Jake Kohl | | |
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