Your Sailmaker designed the ideal sail shape
for your boat, the type of sailing you enjoy and your local conditions. The design was based on
using a cloth that best suited your application when new. Over time your cloth has deteriorated,
reducing its ability to resist the stretching forces on your sail and so loosing the shape your
Sailmaker intended. The effects of this can seriously effect your sailing enjoyment that is why
it is important you specify a quality cloth such as Bainbridge.
- Your mainsail will become more full causing
more heeling, less speed and earlier reefing.
- Your headsail will also become more full
reducing your pointing ability so you have to tack more often.
- The camber (the deepest part of your
sail) will move aft causing more heeling force and drag, and less forward drive.
- The leeches of your sail will fall away
reducing your pointing ability and the gust response of your rig with your sails stretching
and releasing the extra wind power instead of harnessing it to accelerate your boat.
Racing sailors are very aware of these problems
as speed difference between old and new sails is easy to spot.
Cruising sailors
are also becoming more aware of the effects of poor sails.
Stretching sails = more tacking, more reefing, more heeling, longer
to get to a destination = less enjoyment.
Why does sailcloth
deteriorate?
- UV light seriously reduces the strength
of the fibres used in sailcloth, in extreme cases up to 50% in 3 months.
- All materials loose strength when they
are bent back and forth or 'flexed'. When a sail flogs this flexing action damages the fibres.
- Static tensile loads such as leech, outhaul
and halyard tension all stretch the fibres. Over time they loose the ability to recover and
the sail will then never return to the design shape.
- All woven sailcloth
has a hard resin finish that protects the fibre from UV, prevents water
absorbsion and locks the weave together. This finish is relatively brittle
and breaks down with flogging and flexing so causing the sail to feel
soft and soggy and loosing the ability to resist diagonal bias loads.
When will I need
a new sail?
When you notice that the performance of your
boat is less than you are happy with it is time to change but at what point this is depends on
the type of sailing you enjoy. Some racing sailors using very light laminate sails notice a reduction
in performance after just one regatta. Cruising sailors may not notice a performance drop for
a number of years particularly if the sail is made from a fabric such as CL cruising laminate.
 
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