Racing Symmetric and Asymmetric Spinnakers

Faster off the wind!

The sail that is undergoing the most significant development today is the spinnaker. Now, with the help of better fabrics and sailmaking technology, spinnakers are both far more efficient downwind and so closewinded at 45° apparent wind. Through experience with nearly identical boats the key to offwind speed has been determined by spinnaker shape as much as by spinnaker size. This is especially so on any point of sailing high of a dead run. OneSails make a broad range of hi-performance spinnakers for racing boats. The design of every spinnaker is customized for the boat in order to give truly superior performance.

The program used to determine shape also takes into account displacement to ensure that the shape matches the boat. At OneSails, our design team would like to talk to you about customizing spinnakers to fit your boat. Their in depth experience ranging from America’s Cup to small One Design sailboats ensures that they have the knowledge to provide you with the right advice. We are attempting here to make it easier for you to realize the full potential of your new sail(s). The sail selection guide below ‘Faster Off the Wind’ will give you a summary of when to use which spinnaker.

RACING SYMMETRIC SPINNAKERS
RACING ASYMMETRIC SPINNAKERS

De nye kabelløse flyve sejl:
lette, alsidige og nemme at manøvrere

  1. Forbedret aerodynamisk ydeevne.
  2. Struktur integreret i sejlet, som muliggør rullning uden en anti-torsionskabel.
  3. 35% Lavere faldspænding, sammenlignet med et traditionelt sejl med kabel
  4. Uden et kabel kan sejlets forlig designes til at projicere fremad og til luv, hvilket forbedrer sejlets ydeevne med bredere vinkler.
  5. Nem at håndtere, det oprullede sejl er let og kan nemt foldes sammen og passe i sin taske.
  6. Stabil agterligsprofil, selv hvis det måles som en gennaker i henhold til DH, ORC- og IRC-reglerne.
  7. Lettere sejl (uden anti-torsionskabel).
  8. Skræddersyet finish og tilbehør

IFS Sail Codes

Code

Sailing Activity

TWS Knots

TWA Degrees

Material

From

To

From

To

A055/065/075

Racing

2

20

50

110

Membrane or Laminate

AF0

Racing

6

25

55

120

Nylon with laminate luff

AF1

Racing

4

15

70

130

Nylon with laminate luff

AF2

Racing

10

22

115

165

Nylon with laminate luff

AF3

Racing

12

26

110

145

Nylon with laminate luff

Power-reaching has always been a highlight of offshore racing but more sailors are now also looking beyond those up and down inshore courses

There is nothing more exhilarating in offshore sailing than power- reaching – the point of sail we dream about that makes the other legs of a tough race worth the pain… High speeds, spray and that visceral thrill we get knowing a boat is being pushed to its limits as the miles are speedily devoured. A drawback on this point of sail, however, is the heeling and imbalance that can happen when there’s either too much force on the sailplan from the masthead Code 0 (MH0) or even the fractional Code 0 (FR0), resulting in costly sometimes brutal course deviations to hold on to these sails. Yet the speed and power are hard to give up, even with the extra miles covered – while constantly recalculating the VMG trade-offs against a lower heading.

Often the only way to stay high enough to stay on course is to reduce the power and heeling moment by dousing the larger sails and shifting down to smaller headsails. But then there is a significant loss of power and speed, with more of the mainsail needed to maintain drive force. Using more main means shifting the load balance aft, which in turn results in more helm pressure to stay on track. The more main used, the more weather helm needed, and the greater the rudder angle which creates drag, inhibiting speed further.

The result is often a ‘void’ for the otherwise well-equipped offshore racer where the sail inventory is simply not optimised to get the best speed at the desired angle. The latest-generation ocean greyhounds chasing course records know this and have been designed with their masts well aft, creating enormous foretriangles in which to fly multiple combinations of headsails and staysails, often mounted on furlers for easy deployment.

Not all of us have the luxury of reconfiguring the entire boat – mast position, sailplan and appendages – just to accommodate a larger foretriangle and remain competitive in other sailing modes. But we can find speed in reducing heel while retaining power in the sailplan.

OneSails has been working hard on this problem. Paul Eldrid of OneSails in Perth is gearing up for the Austral summer season, and examining how to power up a variety of fast designs ranging from a Bakewell-White 36 to a HH42, DK 46, Carkeek 47 and several TP52s. All show benefits from new reaching headsail designs from OneSails. When given the space to operate efficiently, flying multiple headsails will not only provide more power to better balance out a fully trimmed mainsail, and reduce drag from the rudder, it will also stabilise the flow across the whole sailplan.

‘Fortunately there are no restrictions in IRC and very generous headsail allowances in ORCi that allow for development of these sails to fit an important niche for the passage racer,’ says Eldrid. ‘We have made several discoveries in this process that we think will really re-energise these boats in reaching conditions.’

Rather than the traditional arrangement of tacking a reaching headsail at the bow and then trying to fit in a genoa staysail somewhere on the foredeck, Eldrid has been experimenting with putting the larger headsail out on the end of the bowsprit (called the J0), giving plenty of room to fit another headsail aft of this, such as the new square-top jib staysail (the JS).

Many of us are used to course racing, where headsails all carry battens… this is not necessary with these reaching sails since the depth is further aft and leeches do not need to be straight, in fact they should twist for optimal flow. With no battens, furlers then become a strong option for more boats.

Optimal combinations of the headsails, reaching spinnakers and a reefed or full-hoist main are many and varied. Mindful of cost, OneSails is now developing ‘turbo-charged multiple headsail solutions’ that still use the niches of the MH0 and FR0 but now supplement them with new sails including the J0 and JS.

Up until now OneSails has been building these sails in panelled construction as they test mould shapes at full scale. However, the company’s design and R&D teams are also conducting a fuller Fluid Structure Interaction (FSI) study to provide the data to start using its continuous yarns one-piece 4T FORTE composite membranes to optimise for strength and weight.

‘Already we’re seeing a strong interest in bringing back the fun and thrill of more efficient reaching on all courses,’ says Eldrid. ‘This is an exciting new development path.’

It’s easy to achieve a big foretriangle on a new build – you simply move the mast aft and adjust appendages accordingly. For existing boats it’s less easy, hence the approach by OneSails that involves creating new headsails specifically designed to be flown as far forward as possible off the sprit. The ‘gap’ is then filled with other sail types chosen according to the boat and its racing programme. Note in the simulation how the sail designer has resisted the temptation to be greedy with the area in the forward headsail, opting for more even flow across all three sails.

Spinnaker staysails can significantly improve the performance also in the inshore windward-leeward courses. Since years OneSails is developing these sails that where present in the OneSails sail inventory of the ORCi winners.

Hvorfor vælge OneSails

1. Eksklusiv teknologi

Over de sidste 15 år har OneSails’ designteam udviklet eksklusive teknologier for at gøre et fuldstøbt kontinuerlig sejl til virkelighed for cruise- og racingbåde.

2. Performance

Funktioner som vægt, formkontrol og deformationmodstand betyder bedre ydeevne sammenlignet med traditionelle panelsejl.

3. Kvalitet

Sejlene er designet og fremstillet efter de højeste standarder med omhyggeligt udvalgte komponenter for at sikre den højeste kvalitet og holdbarhed. 4T FORTE™ membraner fremstilles eksklusivt i Italien. Hele samlingsprocessen foregår på én unik fabrik, der sikrer, at alle krav og standarder overholdes.

4. Design

De bedste sejlfaconer er resultatet af kontinuerlig analyse og erfaring. OneSails er på forkant med sejlmagerindustrien og investerer løbende i forskning og udvikling for at sikre, at de allerbedste sejlfaconer er tilgængelige. Denne tilgangs succes bekræftes af det store antal troféer, som OneSails’ kunder har vundet ved nationale, internationale og verdensmesterskaber.

5. Service

En kerneaktivitet for hvert OneSails Loft er at levere førsteklasses service, support og assistance. Som en del af vores serviceforpligtelse har hvert OneSails Loft et team af eksperter til rådighed for at sikre, at vi kan levere på vores serviceløfte. Ud over et voksende antal hovedlofter har OneSails Group et omfattende netværk af servicecentre strategisk placeret langs verdens kystlinje

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