by calden » Sat Jun 07, 2008 11:17 am
Pete:
I'm no expert, but having had two boats now, and two sets of sails on one of them, and having sailed in a friend's J/24, I am suspecting that your problem is either indeed a really blown out sail or something is up with your line control system. Even my original kinda-baggy San Juan 21 1974 mainsail does not have the kind of bagginess that was evident in your picture. My original DS sail was definitely soft and baggy, but it didn't have the pronounced pouch that I see in yours.
Are you sure that you are getting the sail all the way up the mast? Not questioning your previous information, but after looking at that picture again, it's worth double checking. At one point my sail track needed cleaning, but I didn't feel anything sticking until the main was ALMOST all the way up, and then it only had 4" or so to go. Looking from below, it was hard to tell it wasn't up all the way, but the whole sail felt low and the boom hung down. I only discovered it wasn't fully hoisted when a friend pointed out that the headboard wasn't where it ought to be. I cleaned the track and tinkered with the bolt rope: singed it gently with a fireplace lighter and waxed the whole thing with paraffin, and it helped.
The way to clean the track is to get a short section of line that fits a bit snug in the track. Soak the track with Simple Green or some other mild cleaner/solvent and get the rope in there and using a chopstick or other pusher that fits in the slot push it up and down, "scrubbing" the track, then rinse well and dry. Then use Sailkote lubricant in there and use paraffin or beeswax on the boltrope.
Did you have issues with this before getting it cleaned?
If all the mast measurements are accurate and you are really getting the halyards and outhauls snug, then it might be time for a new sail. If this is the case then sailing it will be more enjoyable by a huge factor. I felt like I had a new boat when I sprung for a new mainsail - easier to control, less heeling, quicker to respond to tacking and small adjustments - everything.
Carlos
DS I #1653