Hi!
Does anybody know if Maui still make hardtop masts? Traditionally, I have always known that Maui, Gaastra, Naish and Severne were among the main hardtop masts manufacturers, but the 2014 Unifiber site, as well as some people in other forums, seem to think otherwise. In fact , according to the Unifiber 2014 chart, Maui and Naish are now into c.c. , Gaastra is borderline with c.c. and most of the other hardtop manufacturers are hardtop only in the RDM category. Even Severne, in the SDM category seems to be borderline with c.c. To complicate things even further, now some people in other forums state that Maui has gone into c.c. since last year.
I am still waiting for an answer from Maui. Confusing, isn’it? I don’t know anything about RDM . Advantages, disadvantages?
Somebody speaks of a general trend away from hardtops towards constant curve. Why, I don't know. May be somebody can comment on all this.
The reason why I was thinking of hardtop masts is that they may be better in light winds, because the relative stiffness of the top maintains a tighter leech, while the bottom part, more flexible, allows rotation even with a small DH. I sail mostly in very light winds and my c.c. mast does not allow my sails to have the tight leech I need for REALLY light winds subplaning.( 12 knts approx)
Thanks
Francone
Yes Maui became much less hard top.
But I know what you are thinking, and no you can't stick a Maui mast in your sail to increase leech tension. The rest of the curve will be wrong and with cambered sail that will be fatal.
(I still don't see how an 8.5 does not get you going on a longboard )
Most sail brands are CC or have gradually shifted towards it the biggest winners are "us" we are no longer locked into a specific brand and changing has always been costly now everyone is free to move brands without having to buy new masts all the time.
Hardtop masts don't give a tighter leech my Maui sails are quite the opposite they have a very loose leech whether rigged on a hardtop or CC mast which I'm now using, better off buying a race board sail which are seamed shaped for more light wind power.
Maybe I see am too simple but ...
If you are not planning then what real difference will a tighter leech make ? I reckon if you aren't planning and therefore have very little force applied to your sail, then you could sail an old bed sheet tied to a bamboo cane and it wouldn't make the difference you seem to be looking for.
The more load the more twist, if you have very little load then there is very little twist.
Like everyone else said add another 0.5m2 to the sail size will make about 10,000 times more difference than trying to tighten the leech with a different bend curve mast.
If you don't want a sail this big, fair enough, but the extra power you are going to get in sub-planning conditions with a tighter leech is probably about the same as a different colour sail, a bit of Mr Sheen on the bottom of the board, a single quick pump, less downhaul or anything else.
Ive had several naish masts not hard top, maybe quite old ones. Every single hard top mast ive seen & had snap has broken in exactly same spot- about halfway between boom & ferule, my thinking was harder top stiffened flex until it gets to a point where it has to flex & possibly fatigues or loads that point. Dont know if this is actual or not but i'll not use a hard top mast.
Alot of people can benefit by not going hard top in their sail as most people arent the size/weight/strength of pwa riders.
Hi Francone
I think I understand what you are after, I have heard it referred to as the "glide" whereby you get into a nice little groove and glide along effortlessly.
A good longboard or WOD with a well tuned light wind sail with a deep draft and tight leech will make a huge difference to the experience for sure. I think your wasting your time trying to modify a sail that was designed for different conditions. I have both a 9.5 raceboard and 9.6 formula both Severne.The formula feels like a limp rag in light conditions whereas the raceboard feels powerful and efficient. Wind comes up and the table turns, formula feels powerful and stable and fast whereas the raceboard quickly feels uncomfortable and unstable and slow. Trying to tune the sails to perform in conditions they are not designed for has limited results.
Regarding sail size, big sails need not be difficult or cumbersome in light wind in fact the opposite. The most efficient way to sail in light winds is to get your weight off your feet and get it transferred though the mast foot via the rig ie harness lines, this will rail the board easier and keep the rig upright, therefore you are not holding the rig up it is holding you up. A bigger sail will make gybes and tacks easier and faster because the extra boom length and power of the rig will move the centre of effort further forward or aft and the power will drive it faster. Uphauling is simply technique in fact a big sail can be uphauled easily without an uphaul rope simply by positioning it correctly in relation to the wind and board. Much like a water start use the wind to help lift it rather than fight the wind. Also you tend to drop the sail far less in light conditions on a bigger volume board.
I know lightweight guys who opt for 8.5 over 9.5 because the wind range of the sail is greater for them and the difference in performance in lightwind is small given their weight.
In short to get what you want get a lightwind raceboard sail. The reason they make them bigger now than they used to is because that is better in every aspect for lightwind sailing.
I have a mixture of Gaastra and one Naish hard top sails and now use Gaastra masts with all of them. I find the Gaastra masts to be slightly less hard-top, so I can use the 430 RDM with the 5.0 Naish and it works well, or I can use the 400RDM if the wind is strong and very gusty.
The impression I get is that these sails have a smaller wind range (less top end) but have a good low end for their size. You can see in this video that there is little softness in the top of the sail. I reckon instead of softness in the sail, the mast bends more from lower down above the boom and instead of using slackness in the sail, they use the mast twisting off from the boom up to spill the excess wind. Just my opinion.
Francone, I think I understand what you are doing in attempting to make your sails better suited to crosswind sailing in light wind. In crosswinds when sailing at low speeds it is best to maximise lift (drive) from your sail while not being concerned about high drag. The reason for this (see picture) is that the apparent wind is across the board and so your drag is in a sideways direction and doesn't slow you down much - so no need to try and minimise drag, just maximise the lift and this will give you best power from the sail and best low-speed sailing setup for sailing in a crosswind (or downwind) direction. Your sail shapes seem like they are maximising lift at the expense of high drag, exactly what you want for sub-planing cross-wind. (If attempting to go upwind or planing in light wind, the apparent wind would come more from the front and drag will be directed more in the backwards direction, so it would then become important to minimise drag - so in those conditions a low-drag race sail would be much better.)