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Horvath
 
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Default Please help settle an argument

On Sun, 4 Jul 2004 11:37:52 -0300, "Blorgad"
wrote this crap:

My friend and I are having a disagreement regarding the behaviour of
sailboats on a mooring. We both have limited sailing experience, although he
has a fair amount more than I. We were discussing running up a spinnaker at
mooring in calm air, just to practice putting it up. We eventually
concluded that this wasn't practical, but the argument came in as to our our
different conclusions as to why it would not be. I felt that there would be
no point to put it up, as it would just get blown into the rigging and not
really tell us anything and possibly get torn. He was of the opinion that
somehow the spinnaker could push the boat to one side, fill and turn the
boat around. Initially he said it would go right upwind of the mooring,
then reduced his claim to say that it would turn around at the point where
it was attached to the line at the bow.

I am of the opinion that this is physically impossible and that under no
combination of sail at a mooring could the boat turn around so that the aft
was upwind. I am of the opinion that you could get the boat to swing to one
side or the other a bit by backing the jib, but you could still never turn
the boat around.

I would gratefully accept as many informed opinions as possible on this from
a sailing or physics point of view.


You are correct. A boat on a mooring ball always points into the
wind. No combination of sails will change that. The only way you
could change that is to attach the mooring ball to a stern line.

I have found that it's easier to grab a mooring ball by backing up to
it, with someone standing on the swim platform.





Pathetic Earthlings! No one can save you now!