Great forum guys, I've been following it off and on for a few years; this is my first post though.
Having first gotten into sailing during High School, I jumped into Racing Lasers in New Orleans, then 420's while on the sailing team @ LSU. The team would train @ the Olympic sailing center in Miami, FL during spring break, in even smaller monohulls. I have a good understanding of sail shape and trim, and @ 6'5", I sail better in heavy wind than the light stuff.
The sailing team had an old Nacra 5.2, which in 1996 had not been sailed in several years. I took it out on lake Pontchartrain one day and was hooked on the speed. I took the boat down to Grand Isle, LA for the summer and sailed it daily. Being a dinghy sailor, I was pretty proficient with boat repairs and fiberglass work. I soon found out why the boat had been out of the water for so long. A few scary moments off shore and a few sheets of fiberglass later, the boat was back in the water. I now had a better understanding of the stress a multihull experienced when pushing it hard in heavy seas.
Fast forward to 2010, and I have been sailing a Nacra 5.7. Purchased new, in 1997 I think, from Key Sailing in Pensacola the boat has been a great platform to take friends out on the water. The boat has held up well over the years. The mast was replaced once, and two years ago a back stay broke on an especially nasty day on Santa Rosa Sound in FL.
The boat has not been in the water since I blew the stay, sadly. My in-laws have a place on South Padre island in TX. It looks like a GREAT place to sail, but the 5.7, without centerboards, is a tough boat to steer when moving fast. As compared to the 5.2 I learned on, the 5.7 exhibits weather helm that I never felt on the 5.2.
Having read through the various posts regarding the 5.7, I agree that it's a lot of boat on a windy day. I love the enormous mylar main and boomless design, but the steering is what is holding me back. I have tweaked the boat as much as my monohull background can figure out; which could be the complete wrong direction I suppose. My sailing time had been limited to one excursion a year for the past few years, so I mostly just live with it rather than experiment with the rigging.
Considering that the winds of the Laguna Madre seem steady @ 15mph or more in the summer, I'd really like to know if there is something that I can do to work with the steering. The boat has wings, dual traps and an array of tiller extensions to accommodate any condition as well as a roller furling jib.
Is there perhaps a rigging configuration with the mast that might be exacerbating this steering issue or is it just the result of not having centerboards? Or do I just need to train a crew?
I asked a few questions at the one race I did in Ocean Springs, but that was more than ten years ago, and no one had ever seen a 5,7 @ that point.
Ideally I'd like to trim sail and steer with a hull in the air, and not need to use a death grip on the tiller extension to keep the boat from trying to head up. It was easy enough on the 5.2.....
The GT300 and Ruff Riders are events I would like to do in the future, if I can resolve these issues.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated.