Jamie Thomson's Nationals Preparation Tips
Thanks to Jamie Thomson from Thomson Sails for these tips.
https://thomsonsails.com/
Nationals Preparation Tips Part 2
Before we get started this week, I need to just
finish off Part 1 with important rig settings. This is so you will know you are
at least stating in the correct setup and can then just concentrate on
everything else.
Mast Rake.
We measure this preferably by rigging the boat
with full rig tension on, and then leaning the boat over in it's side, and
measuring from the bottom edge of the top black band on the mast to the inside
corner where the transom meets the floor of the boat. This should be 6140mm,
give or take 10mm.
Rig tension:
Tension on the side stays should be 180kg. ( You
might need to find someone with a rig tension gauge to help you measure this).
This is important. Too loose a rig will mean that your jib luff sags
excessively in a breeze. I would also advocate for your shrouds and
forestay to be no less tan 3mm diameter to minimise stretch in the rig.
Mast.
When you have hoisted your mainsail, before
putting any vang or mainsheet tension on, the mast should be straight, both
fore and aft and sideways. It can help to sight this by holding your mainsail
halyard tight down to the gooseneck and sighting up it relative to the mainsail
track in the mast.
If you have the mast bending forward in the
middle, you need to adjust your spreaders so that the tips are further forward.
The tension on the shrouds will then be pulling back more on the middle of the
mast. Likewise, if the mast is bending backwards in the middle, you will need to
adjust your spreader tips so that they are further aft.
If there is sideways bend, one shroud may be
longer than the other. Lengthen or shorten one or the other until you get the
mast straight sideways. Sideways bend hinders how high you can point and reduces
power, so if you have side bend you may be slower on one tack than the other,
or rather, faster on one tack than the other. Still, it is better to have it
straight and consistent.
If you've had to adjust your rig tension of
straightness, once you have done these, go back and check that the mast rake is
still right.
Jib Height.
The jib needs to be at the correct height on the
forestay so that it sheets correctly to the jib tracks. Start by drawing a
short line at the clew that is part of a line that would extend from the clew
eyelet to the bottom of the colour panel at the luff. When the jib is sheeted
in for going to windward, the sheet should be a continuation of this line to
get the right balance between tension on the leech and the foot.
If you find that your sheet doesn't line up
properly, you will need to either raise or lower your jib on the forestay. (
this is assuming you have jib tracks going across the side tanks rather than
along the side tanks, when you can simply slide the track lead fore and aft..
Athwartships tracks are better though by the way.)
Ideally, the foot of the jib will also be
touching the back of the short decked area at the bow. If the jib is too high,
air will be wanting to escape underneath the foot rather than flowing along the
sail. If the sheet is lined up but you find the jib is not brushing the back of
the decked area, then you need to move your jib tracks forward so that you will
then be able to lower the jib.
OK! Once we've done all that, we can go sailing
without needing to distract ourselves worrying if the rig is right or not,
because we need to just focus on sailing.
With only 11 or so weeks to go before the
Nationals start, we need to get the most value out of our sailing time, and
that means practicing as much as racing. But fortunately you can do both at the
same time.
I can't emphasize enough that Practice is the
biggest thing you can do to improve your sailing.
And - practice efficiently and intelligently.
After all, we only have limited time on the water.
Remember those slow patches that I asked you to
think about last time? That's what we need to work on when we are out sailing.
Bad tack? Think about why they are bad. Lack of
co-ordination by one or both of you, or the combination? Timing the turn, coming
in off the wire, releasing the jib? Think your way through your own tacks and
what you could do to make them smoother and more efficient. Discuss it
together.
Think of what the ideal is. Full speed for as
long as possible before you start turning, full speed as soon as possible after
the tack. Everything needs to lead towards this ideal.
Go through this procedure for all your maneuvers
or other slow spots that you have identified.
Don't worry if you're not at the 100% ideal
level. Only superstar sailors with tens of thousands of hours of practice get
close to the ideal. All we can do is get as far towards there as we can.
Just small improvements everywhere will end up
making a big difference.
Always be trying to get the boat sailing fast
again after any maneuver. Do the task, settle down, get the boat flat, sails
trimmed, and up to speed again.
If you want to make these improvements as
quickly and efficiently as possible, it means that you need to spend your time
on the water wisely. It's not enough to just head out with enough time to make
the start, or sit around waiting for the start, sail one tack beats, one gybe
runs, and head straight in after the race.
You need to have thought about, and talked about
what you want to work on and improve upon before you go out.
Head out earlier, or even for a morning session
if you have the time. Stay out for another half an hour after the race finishes
when everything is fresh in your mind about what happened during the race.
And if your time constraints are such that you
can't manage those extra times, (and even if you can) make the most of your
time on the race course.
Try to fit in ten tacks on each beat, fit in
four or five gybes on the run.
Beat upwind while you are waiting for the start.
Raise, gybe and lower your spinnaker, and as efficiently as you can.
And always, be thinking about getting the boat
up to speed again as soon as possible after each slow spot.
We'll talk more about this 'straight line' speed
aspect next time, but, to give you the basics to work on for now, you want to
sail your boat flat, trim your sails so the telltales are flowing, and steer so
that the jib luff telltales are flowing.
But while you're learning all that, you still
can be developing a feel for boat speed, as it is something you can only learn
from time on the water. The feel for your boat, when it is going slow or fast.
This is what you need to concentrate on feeling for between all the maneuvers,
when you are straight lining.
Feel is what really separates different crews.
Feel means that you know exactly how hard the sheet should be pulling at you,
how the boat should be riding over the waves, how the tiller feels, and what
the water sounds like when the boat is “in the groove”.
Jamie
Thomson Sails
https://thomsonsails.com/