I raced my H21SE in the Twelfth Annual Hiram's Haul endurance race a few weeks back. What a blast! We were the fastest of the non-spinnaker boats(a SC17 and a pair of H18M). But the new boats I couldn't compete with in light air. One thing that I observed on day two of the race, as the "Wolfpack" approached, they looked like leaning telephone poles from a distance. As they got closer you could see that the sails had a constant airfoil from top to bottom. Not like the old style sails with a squashed "D" shape from the front. The wind picked up and I was able to hold them off for a while matching their speed knot for knot. Finally the wind dropped and switched directions in favor of their spins. It looked like a massive flower bloom as they popped their spinnakers out. All I could do is watch helplessly as one by one they scooted past. Congratulations to Carbon Cruising in their awsome M20. They were lightyears ahead of the rest. And many thanks to Scott and his wife at Performance Sail and Sport for a great event. The Halloween Party at Captain Hiram's was incredible!!!
I would like to reshape the airfoil on my sail so that it resembles the newer sails. So the question is...has anybody tapered their stock Hobie battens? Any thought or ideas? Will this make the sail more efficient in light air? Or is it determined by the sail cut?
Note: They started the non-spin boats one hour ahead of the spin boats.
--
Flightlead Bimare F18 HT SpaceCoast
--