One of my boys built himself a lapstrake (clinker) dinghy. At the time, we were working very long hours in the Brisbane workshop and I couldnt give him much of my time to help. But, he was surrounded by timber, glue, and tools, and with space in one corner and a ready-built strong-back he was on his way.
The boat turned out very well indeed, especially as the builder was only fourteen years old.
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The owner-builder (Dave, in white) with Cousin Kevin lending a helping hand. |
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Hull nearing completion |
After the building process, Dave was keen to get on the water, and he decided to purchase a carbon windsurfer mast to speed the launching, and a friend gave him an old
Laser sail, which happened to be the same size as the designed sail.
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Builder, carbon windsurfer mast, and Laser sail |
The boat sailed reasonably well with the windsurfer mast, but it was too flexible down low and when sheeted on, the whole rig bent aft inducing weatherhelm and other handling problems - still it was fun.
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Sailing nicely in light conditions... |
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...but in the gusts and sheeted hard, the rig bends aft, and you can see that the boat is becoming difficult to control |
Eventually, Dave stashed away enough money to get the proper sail made. It had a fair amount of roach and leech battens which were too short. The leech would not stand as the flexible mast bent back, and it flapped uselessly. I dont have a photo to hand, but below is one of a boat we built earlier to the same design. This one had a nice, hollow timber mast which I made using the "Birds Mouth" method. Although a lot stiffer than the windsurfer mast, the leech problem is still evident.
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Stiff mast on an earlier boat, but still having problems with the floppy leech |
We decided to do something drastic, so we cut the roach off Daves new sail, removed the battens, and sewed on a new leech tabling (hem, I guess you would call it). This improved the set of the sail, as I had put a slight hollow in the leech and it worked well without battens. But the mast was still too whippy.
The final stage was to install a forestay and two shrouds (side stays). In order to retain the sail-shaping advantages of the bendy mast, we attached the stays at a point only a fraction above the half-height point on the mast (as per
Rig 6 in Phil Bolgers book,
"100 Small Boat Rigs", which is now published as
"103 Sailing Rigs").
The improvement has been astounding. The handling issues have been resolved, and with the mast held at the half-height position, all sorts of sail shaping options are available by using the main sheet, the vang, the halyard, and the outhaul. We made the stays from 4mm Dyneema without an outer sheath as an experiment, and it has worked very well indeed. I couldnt work out the correct method for splicing the braided Dyneema core, so we ended up just doing plain bowline knots around the stainless thimbles - not very neat, but they work fine. I dont have sailing photos, but here is the boat on dry land as we set up the stays.
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Stays attached halfway up the mast |
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Simple lashings |
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Mast far better controlled, and showing a little 11sq.ft. Heron jib set as well. The original boat carried quite a lot of weather helm and the jib helps to balance that out. |
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Sail plan in cat-rig form. The alloy sleeve around the lower part of the mast was an earlier attempt to stiffen things up. |
All of this shows how much fun you can have messing around with rigs and layouts. A great source of satisfaction.
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