I circumnavigated with Clipper Round The World Yacht Race 2019-2020 edition. Our tactic to reduce the chance of this spinnaker halyard issue was to when possible which was most of the time have 2 halyards connected to the head of the sail. Then on every hour we adjusted the halyard tensions by alternately tightening one halyard and loosening the other. This was done entirely to eliminate having a single point of halyard chafe. We hand quite a lot of spinnaker disasters during some 40,000 nautical miles of sailing but never a snapped halyard.
That is a very cool idea. Had not thought of that! Chafe is a huge issue when doing big miles like this, but when the speeds get bigger, the threat to safety goes way way up. Someone hung up in a sheet when a spi goes over and we are talking MOB or broken bones or worse. I bet Clipper really upped your game.
What I like best about this video is Nick's honesty. He is unafraid to let us know if he doesn't like something. In all of his videos, he is not afraid to be self-critical, and he is not afraid to voice his opinion if a decision is made that he doesn't agree with and why. If he is wrong, he will admit it. All politicians out there....This is how you are supposed to act!
I know nothing about sailing and am totally hooked on your adventures. I absolutely love that you take the time to talk about the physics and engineering of things. Very satisfying.
Many others Outre-mer broke their spinnaker halyard at the same point. The « retainer » IS the problem. We attached a low friction ring on it and now our halyard passes through the low friction, with more possibilities of movement. A block would have perhaps be a better choice than the retainer…
I'm sure had the skipper known, he'd have been on the lookout for that issue. Low friction ring to the rescue once again. Those things are so useful. And probably the best marine business to be in....ever....the cost .....!!!! For a smooth metal ring!!! Anyways, thanks for chiming in with first hand knowledge.
On long off wind passages such as racing top Hawaii, we always made a point to adjust the halyard tension at least twice daily so it doesn't chafe at one point
I absolutely love this channel, I learn so much! I feel like when we’re finally able to take the plunge, we’ll be starting with such a great foundation thanks to y’all.
All I have to say is Nick, you have my respect and Outremer made a good decision in partnering with you and Megan. I'm locked in for the duration of this very interesting journey.
As an Outrider 55 owner we were advised to make sure the spinnaker halyard where it meets the shackle was not hoisted into the halyard retainer as doing so will cause rough edges to form. My theory is that that is what has happened in this case.
We have a Outremer 51 and almost lost our spinnaker to a chafed halyard on our 2021 Atlantic crossing. It also had a very long luff, and in an effort to reduce the foot chafing on the lifelines, I pulled the halyard up to high. The shackle on the halyard (same as your setup) then ground into the aluminum retainer, creating a sharp edge. We had chafe issues the rest of the way across, but could easily have lost the sail had we not found the problem in time. I suspect you might have had the same issue … unlucky
Interesting. Wonder if it was the same thing. Foot of that spi was catching on the forward stanchions as well. Captain made a little protector you'll see in some of the shots. Chafe not unique to this builder....it is an issue many if not most boats making long trips like this. What a headache!
Nick, I totally agree with your appreciation of a symmetrical spinnaker. We got a heavy duty symmetrical for our outremer 45 from 2022 and absolutely loved it on our Atlantic crossing. Once we were hit at night by a squall and it even survived 37 kts of true wind speed. A situation that felt quite scary to be honest especially when we were getting to speeds of up to 23 kts. Of course we should have doused the spinnaker before, but at some point were simply to late to react. However, it feels quite comforting to know that it even worked under these circumstances.
wow, that is incredible. I have a friend who took his old Danson 55 light across and absolutely hated the sym, so I was skeptical. I wonder if the newer boats are better with them or something.... But I loved that sail. If......IF we ever get our own boat, I am buying one for sure. Now that I think about it, I think that it is the lighter boat that is going to benefit most, because if you put an undersized spi on a heavier boat sailing DDW, it is not going to be moving very well. Hmmmm.....need me a light boat!
Yes, you are probably right, it will work best with lighter boats….we had always a smile on our face when we were surfing the waves with our symmetrical spinnaker and it worked flawless from 11/12 kts TWS up
well done nick: reducing sail at night is very important lesson to learn but again as I've experienced its a delivery and delivery crews are paid by results and have to make choices most normal owner skippers wont take. i do feel for that skipper he's had his choices shown all over the internet and I hope it doesn't affect his job going forward maybe he learned a bit about your routing advice.. but folk need to remember he's paid to get a boat to where its needed on time.
@@Corey-pd3mi you would think but parts can be fixed and I'm betting Outremer don't care. its a cost they plan for they need that boat at the show for the sales potential. regardless of cost,, the halyards is a couple of hrs at most the sails not needed for a show.. when I did deliveries for a skipper who had a contract with a similar french company they gave us a big pile of spare and tool boax it was part of the trip to fix stuff as it broke. sometimes the delivery sales were havier than the costumers sails we or the dealers would swap them out and send them back.. most boats are now shipped rather than sailed to new customers now. they let the customer do the shake downs and expected repairs. Not really surprised by the games on this trip
All I had on my 40’ tri were symmetrical spinnakers, and they worked great without the mainsail interfering. But not just for dead downwind. I put two sheets on each corner of the sail, one to the bow and one to the aft of the hull. I would usually use one side to the bow and sheet the clew to the aft spot on the other side. If you let off the bow line and sheet in the aft line, you can point quite high. It’s easy to gybe by swapping the bow and stern sheets. I never see anyone using two sheets on each side, but I really think it makes a big difference.
Back in 1985 I had a Fountaine Pajot 37' Louisiane catamaran. Asymmetricals were not usual in those days and my spinnaker was delivered with double sheets on each side as described above. I confirm that second set of sheets gives extra control of the sail, makes is much more stable and allowed for angles between 180 and 110 to 100 degrees. Hoisting and controlling the sail even single handedly was never a problem. My next cat, a Fountaine Pajot 38 Athena, was still delivered with the same setup.
Check the stitching on the inside of all the spinnaker socks, where the snuffer line runs inside a pouch. Incidence left an unfinished seam on ours, and the loose threads fouled the snuffer line. The end result was a torn spinnaker. Major manufacturing fail. If those snuffer lines aren't buttery smooth, there is a problem.
On my trimaran, the spinnaker halyard splice was not blocked with an appropriate whipping twine donut to operate as a stopper so that when you overwinch the halyard through the mast sheave, even worse on a rotated mast, the hard stainless steel halyard shackle may damage the mast sheave, especially on my mast where mast sheave are made of cast aluminium… causing intense shafing especially with heavy loads, and shocks when the spinnaker is whipping in the wind. Probably also damaging if you try to overstretch the halyard with a powerful electric winch on a rope that has no possible stretch. I was able to save my halyard with whipping twine and rope treatment and using a dremel to polish the mast sheave. Rope treatment is very useful to reduce rope fraying, and relatively inexpensive… it gives you time to see the problems coming before it’s too late. Color coding the halyard with marks may help to stop winching when the spinnaker is getting close to the mast sheave. Barber haulers on sheets may help to control the chute of the spinnaker and very useful to keep the sheets off the water when things turn wrong… always easier after the facts ;-)
Unfortunately the halyards were not marked on that boat, but yes we whip the marks on all halyards on our own boats. I've seen round stoppers above the eye-splice before. That would be a good idea too.
I just got back from Grenada Sailing Week and I raced on Spirit of Everest a Leopard 47. Owner sold his J24 that we have raced for years and I must tell you the cat is way more everything. There was an Outremer 51 & 45 in our class. Outremers are beautiful 😍
The last video was fabulous and this one is even better. Fabulous information and food for thought. The delivery had the perfect cadence as always. The words per minute was spot on as always. Maybe slightly slower than usual that gave a perfect contrast to the mayhem. I have been a long time watcher and the editing and storytelling just keeps on improving. My hats off to the executive producer…😂. All that is missing is Meghan’s dazzling smile.
I watch you guys, HTSO, Zatara, Sam Holmes and Rigging Doctor - all for years. This was the best episode for me of all as a techy person, although I do miss Megan’s smile and laughter. I’m a pilot like you- Citation X, PC12NGX, instructor on Global 5000 and volunteer instructor for disadvantaged aspiring young pilots. So I enjoy the technical thinking that goes into design, components, strategic and tactical planning and hydro-aerodynamics. Amazingly photographed, narrated and edited - Is that you or Megan? I was really psyched for this crossing and, except for Megan’s absence, its way more than I thought it would be. I send cash now and then to you and the others because I don’t like Patreon. Thanks. :-)
Wow, thanks. And as a pilot, you can appreciate the need for CRM on these boats. We could have done better there as well. Megan is just about healed up and hopefully back in the videos soon.
Wow, what content you got out of this trip, experience and reinforcement of the experience you already had. Otremere hit it out of the park having you on this trip.
I hope the captain gets penalised for littering, that could float on the surface and wrap around someones prop now. Causing them to have to get in the water in far less safe conditions. The seas were small. If you're fit enough to be out there flying that sail at night, you should be fit enough to clean up your mess. Goggles, a knife and a dive torch. Good video as usual Nick and respect for being candid. The same thing happened to our swivel, same brand but we caught it half way through. Clearly the manufacturer couldn't give a ....
Could the halyard splice have rubbed through on the edges of the mast where the halyard block comes through if it were hauled in tight to the mast? I think this is what you were discussing with the transfer block etc and the HLU. I'm sure Outremer will do a thorough investigation, but it would be great if you can report their findings if and when they have them and allow you to do so.
That would be my guess, but it really is a guess. I haven't taken any measurements or climbed the mast. Yeh, will be interesting to see if they follow up on this.
Thanks for your retex. The spliced end is minimum 40cm long (visible at 20:05), so your worries are reasonable, but I would say that the broken part (visible at 18:05) look like it is at the very end of the halyard, on the shackle eye, and doesn't look like it's on the mast part. So yeah, I really don't understand how this happened.
Even though we only have a single halyard and attachment point i'm checking everything double today. We do have a 'spare' in our mast lift, which on a junk rig is to hold the boom up and adjust the height of the boom, so we could get aloft in an emergency, but I don't want to have to do that. The junk sail with just a halyard and a sheet is so wonderfully simple. Our 42' modern junk surfs a half true wind speed with full sail until about 22 when we would reef. Or, if conditions were smooth, maybe carry until 25 and surf at 12. Scow bow lifts and glides on a layer of bubbles from the rolled bow wave.
Hello Nick, I hope Megan is fully recovered now and since it's February 10, she has already re-joined you in Florida. Thanks for this interesting video. The good folks at Outremer made a common mistake on this rush to get to the "Boat Show" on time. They chose to invite two Captains for the same trip. Bad idea.
Thanks, she is feeling better now. There was only one captain, and he was 100% responsible for the boat, the crew, the voyage, and like all captains, his decisions. You might be imagining some kind of friction on board. There was none.
Tough luck on the spinnaker. All four of the spliced loops on our Para Sailor sheets started to get core hernias -- where the core bulges out between the weave of the cover. I sewed them all back in place... seemed to work. I'm a bit suspicious of these loops. I never have a problem with a bowline... but that's a knot flying around that could hit someone. Same reason you don't use metal hardware or carabiners on those connections. Instead, Dyneema soft shackles. Once a chaffing or a hernia starts it keeps getting worse. Something with our para sailor caught and tore off the mast light. Don't know when it happened or how. Just one day we noticed it was no longer there and the screws were sheared off. Just another boat puzzle. (Be cool if a sail company put cameras at the top of a few boats and let them run whenever there's an additional head sail. See what voodoo is actually going on up there.) We thought we had some monofilament wrapped around one of our props. Very cold water. A GoPro on a pole showed this. The next morning we heaved to, lowered the dinghy and brought it along side with me and my filleting knife, cable tied to a pole. I could trace the outline of prop and sail drive. Another GoPro inspection showed the fishing line had already fallen off, but I felt confident I could cut if off if needed. I had a dry suit (Nick recommended I have for crossing the North Pacific. Thank you) but I couldn't see a way of padding it out for insulation and then getting below the surface with it.
Have used the old knife on a boathook trick myself for kelp on the prop....any way to stay out of the Pacific water when away from the dock....cheers Will
Try to let it go. I’ve felt like this in many situations (usually at work) where the opportunity to manage is given to another…and they immediately are lacking the self confidence to use the knowledge of others and truly lead. That person will perform quite poorly because they feel the pressure. The only way to possibly help them succeed is to never express any concern for their decisions. I know I know…their decisions can be absolutely awful…but the only way you can help is…actually you may not even get the chance to help because this person is so lacking confidence they cannot collaborate. But you can make it worse if they detect your concerns…they would be the awesome leader if they DID solicit genuinely the thoughts of others…but guaranteed they can’t even hear you speak once this develops. Anyway most of this is reminders for myself coming out of a recent situation parallel to this. I hope what you feel from my words is empathy?
I understand what you are saying, but that's not how affective crews work in my experience. Responsibility is divided and shared but the captain/skipper is the final authority with the ultimate responsibility for the boat, the crew, and the voyage. It is not the crew's responsibility to make the captain feel like a leader. If he or she is making poor decisions (in the opinion of the crew), it is their responsibility to voice those concerns. Group think leads to mistakes and sometimes accidents. I left it out of the video as to not stir this pot any further, but I told the captain in the hours before the spinnaker went overboard that given the squalls in the area and flying it at a high angle (085 apparent), we should take the spinnaker down and go to the genoa. He said he'd wait until the next day. Did that contribute to the spinnaker going overboard? I don't know...I wasn't even on watch when it happened. But, at the end of the day, the captain answers to the owner for the damage, and I do not.
I've crossed a few oceans, a few times, and it makes for very tense life on board if someone is giving the impression they know best, and this can be entirely non verbal. We understand you had your opinion, and probably voiced it (many times) to this captain, but judging from the video dialog, it was always "I'm right, they're wrong" with constant superior tone, never appearing supportive, only critical. This is not team work, especially in a serious and possibly life threatening situation, the last thing and the least helpful, is judgment. And that's all I heard here. I imagine it can't be soon enough to get to shore.
Great video and always good to see the team working the problem and not getting on at each other, especially when it's happening in the middle of the dark and things can become fraught. Murphey's Law not during the day. Shame to lose the sail in that way and will be interested to find out any firmer conclusions but reading some of the comments there are some people with experience and knowledge of the issue so not totally isolated. Lovely when you did have the full champagne sailing and calmer conditions. Looking forward to the next video.
I stopped delivering sailboats and went commercial. 2 of my cat delivers from Annapolis to Virgin Islands during the December month is sometime rough. Getting there safely is more important then beating up yourself and the boat. Watch your cold fronts...
Really interesting comments here. I had a spinnaker hazard blow half way across the Atlantic and luckily for us the kite kept billowing out in front so we were able to pull it in. One of the advantages of a spinnaker pole is it holds the clew up. That was 30 years ago, however the halyard should always be lowered at least 300mm from the top so the splice doesn’t jam the sheeve. Also it clears the head of the sail from the mast which improves the windage at the top of the sail which keeps the sail fuller and relieves some of the pressure on the halyard. Shifting the halyard tension regularly is great but I always bring the sail down to inspect after every 24hr run.
I admire your attitude Nick. I probably would have been constantly harping on the captain to do the right thing and go South, especially when the weather behaved exactly as you predicted.
Thank you. Three things: first of all, the captain is a nice person-we got along just fine. Second, two+ weeks is a long time to spend with anyone, so always best to tread lightly. Lastly, while I disagree with his decisions regarding routing, those decisions did not put me or the boat in danger. It was simply inefficient and unnecessary given the conditions and forecast. Had he made dangerous decisions, you can bet the relationship would have come last.
Another great educational episode. Nick, one thing I haven't seen you talking about in this series is "dagger boards". Daggers boars are associated with performance cat... Were they used in this trip? What are your thoughts? Hype? Unnecessary complicated hardware with high cost? Maybe in future episode?
Nice episode Nick. I love an asymmetrical spinnaker. We crossed the whole Atlantic from Cape Town to Namibia then to St Helena and Fernando de Noronha in Brazil just on this sail. From 75 degrees until about 160 degrees as you say but I prefer in deeper downwind attaching the tack to the windward hull not the centre as this allows the sail for fly better and with the tack on a meter length of line it floats very nice in the wind. Having the tack fixed does not allow this as much. Glad you got a crossing in 😉
What about a Parasailor? I recommend SHOKZ OPENFIT ear device for maintaining situational awareness. Ultimate sound and comfort. I often forget I am wearing them.😄
No direct experience with them. For a symmetrical spinnaker, we would choose something that could take 25-30 knots apparent wind. Not sure a parasailor can do that. Maybe it can, but I don't know.
Usually the downwind VMG of a monohull is significantly less than on a broad reach. But it's not true of most catamarans. In fact, there is hardly any difference at all. The boat speed may drop, but not the VMG. But I don't know the polars of the Outremer 55.
Nick with the Asymmetrical tacked off the bow sprit, a longer luff could be an issue but releasing the tack in bigger winds not only reduces the loading but also give you lift as the tack line tension, not much but does help. Tacking off the windward bow improves the wind entering the sail beyond beam and reduces the shielding by the main.
@@TheOKellys that spin halyard Must have a swivel just below the exit from the mast or it will chaff. If its doubled for using on code zero, the anchor should also have a chain style swivel to remove winch twist from line. Try releasing tack line to add lift and also enable you to see forward if tacked off windward hull in bigger winds. I also start engines and run hard to release load from sail down wind for socking and launch. Launching beyond 20kt winds downwind can easy blow a spin. Once you running at 10kts, AW is only 10kts.
I freeze framed it and there's a change in line diameter at elbow length from the eye at 20:24 showing how deep it was buried. And I think it may have been taper spliced. Where the line goes into itself to form the eye it's failed and the only way that would happen is if when the sail flogs the tension in the line from halyard stretch pulls the eye against the halyard restrainer on the mast. Too much halyard tension not leaving enough halyard at the head of the sail as well as a poorly designed restrainer.
Calling "Clarity" and Nick back in the captains chair. The other guys would make good hands for sure. I myself learned a lot from this passage also, never underestimate a Meteor freakiin ologist.
I thought you were gonna play "I been to the desert on a horse with no name. It felt good to get out of the rain!" Perfectly ironic for crossing on a CAT. Haha!
Did it again Nick - you absolutely nailed it - in every category. Thank you and thank you Outremer and the humble crew for making this possible! Maybe a little CRM (as from aviation) could be useful here? Just an idea from another armchair sailor fully aware that we are not entitled to giving recommendations 😉
@@TheOKellys As as 32 year airline pilot, I see a real need in the boating community for more knowledge of CRM, Human Factors, Decision making, and Threat and Error Management. It's unfortunate there isn't more emphasis on this.
@@TheOKellys As a new captain (just 6-pack), I'm interested in this topic. Can you point me to books or on-line resources that discuss CRM and other human factors in the context of small yachts. There is some of this in the American Sailing Assoc training materials (e.g. Fred King's writings) but it seems very important for charters and cruises amongst people with similar experience, but differing opinions (e.g. bare boat charter trips within a sailing club group, or inter-generational family trips). Excellent videos as always! Thanks for putting the time and effort into producing great entertainment but also a great learning resource.
that's how we did it on Clarity. I made the suggestion, but no takers. Perhaps we didn't have the right shackle aboard for the tack to fly it from the weather bow. You'll notice the tack of the spi is pinned into the furling drum. That furling drum is for the Code D...not for the spinnaker which uses a sock. Anyway, yes, that would have been a good setup for our needs as we were jibing a lot with apparent wind at 135.
Nick, the tack of the A2 should not be in the furler. I have an Outremer 55, and I have another line exiting from the tip of the bowsprit where you attach the tack. It gives you a little bit more HLU space too. But I have the carbon bowsprit, and it could be different… I can easily bring the tack to the windward bow using one of the guys of the symmetrical spinnaker. You attach it with a simple bowline. BTW, I also love this sail…
@@cat_catarsis Agreed...only a matter of time before that furler dings up the sprit or gets ding'd. We also didn't have another set of sheets aboard, so setting the tack to the windward bow would have been tough. There were a few problems with the setup and handling. Not in the video but that spi got ripped on the spreader a couple days prior, and repaired. Don't know the circumstances as I was off-watch. With your sprit being longer, I wonder if the sail was the same measurement as yours...it should have been different.
@@TheOKellys Maybe the sails sizes for the carbon vs non carbon bowsprit are different. I don’t know. In any case, the aspect of my A2 is similar to “Big Blue” (you can see it in my profile picture), and I it works fine. Also, for the symmetrical spi I have a set of 2 guys, in addition to the 2 sheets that are used for all the large front sails. Most likely Moonshot is lacking some of the spinnaker rigging (it is an option that you must order separately at Outremer).
Kitties or kiddies? Meow…ya know…for good luck. I don’t know the terminology for the device where the halyard parted. I get the point about expecting it to part earlier. Though I am curious about the range of motion where the retaining bolt end is located, relative to the sail head and the mast. Where the halyard connects to the swivel, would a pendant provide better protection than an eye-splice?
@TheOKellys - Thanks for this episode of your Atlantic crossing. The one thing that would have saved the boat owner’s “Big Blue” kite would have been daily rig instructions. Every distance race that I’ve EVER raced, of my 35 year professional career, we twice daily sent the bowman up the rig to visually inspect the halyards and standing rigging couplings as they exit the mast. That sail likely has a replacement value of around $10K, and several $-hundred to replace head swivel (if lost), and that bent stanchion on the starboard bow! They say that time is money, well 15min of going aloft via a powered deck wench would have saved all of that money and then some! Expensive decision…!
Hate to be the bowman! On Clarity we really never flew a kite at night, so we were always checking once a day at least. Chafe is a huge issue on all ocean boats. Just thought of one more cost.....that poor halyard!
Nick, your voiceover is like Butter. You should hire out for other You Tube channels or documentaries. Maybe you are the next "Sir David Attenbourough"
Always helpful to have everything on 'tape.' I know, I know, old school. 🤪 Most likely will help the manufacturers to refine the tools. See you next time. ✨ 🌊 💨 ⛵️ 🏝️ ⚓️ 🌞 ✨
A spinnaker pole and associated control lines would give you the control of the foot you seek and then with careful trimming (something cruisers aren't usually on top of) you should be able to keep the kite flying well. Check a few skiff or dinghy explainer videos for proper trimming of a symmetrical spinnaker (kite) on a pole. VMG on an asym is all well and good if you compare to your probable speed running straight down without it. Plenty of racers with both options choose very carefully which they use based on their knowledge of their boats reach angles, wind speed and VMG.
I think, if we'd had any aboard the boat, we could have run sheets back to the turning blocks aft and left the guys in place. That would have given us all the control we needed. We do have friends on a Perry 43 that run poles and they seem please with their wing-on configuration.
There is a saying ... experience ... makes the master ... you are lucky Nick ... that you did not get in to a bigger trouble ... better to go the less aggressive ... but safer ... way ... how is the Lady M doing?
There is nothing as nice as a nice spinny run. There can always be disagreements with the person in charge, Capitan or Navigator. However, the CO is the CO. Responsibility and consequences are on them. It is also impressive to see the size of the mast and sheet close up. Gives you an idea how large the boat is.
This experience of braking the halyard is all the evidence I need. I have long held that the captain must have a mix of talents and able to switch gears in the analysis and subsequent synthesis to make sound decisions. Some times the book doesn't tell you what to do.
Very entertaining, I appreciate your attempt at trying to walk the tightrope and could only chuckle, chuckle alot. I didn't see coming all the ass covering though. Route planning is one thing, but the halyard fiasco caught me off guard. Anyhoo, great stuff ! , and keep up the good work.
I usually prefer the term "After Action Review" to "Post Mortem", but I guess in this case I guess it is a PM, such a shame to lose a sail. Very interesting to get the real use feedback on the different downwind sails. Have a whole new appreciation for the symmetrical spinnaker. (And that Murphy guy sure takes advantage of any situation).
I'm not a sailor, but it seems that boat would be too much for you two to handle safely. Every boat, every motorcycle, every bike is a compromise. None can do everything you'd like to do in every situation. Seems the search for a performance boat gives up a lot in livability and ease of a couple sailing safely. Getting there safely is more important than getting there fast. Love the channel, thanks for the content.
After watching the last episode, I found myself a little perplexed about the circumstances of this passage. The idea of relying just on instincts and not use any of the available tools to plan the route seems like an unnecessary risk.
The trouble with weather forecasts is the inbuilt 40% margin of error,being on the water and reading cloud,waves and wind direction and varying wind speeds is where captains knowledge and experience come into play,rule number 1 from captain Ron’s rule book,if it’s going to happen,it’s going to happen out there on the water.
1. A schedule on a sailboat? 2. Cut the corner? 3. Crossing the Atlantic in Feb? 4. As you noted, a spinnaker at night? When you’re not racing with a big crew? Well, it all makes for ‘interesting’ entertainment.
This is a great series - haven't done much sailing at all, but this is so educational regarding technical issues, and also what may happen at sea regarding politics, lol (and how best to handle that). Also beautiful photography - abs riveting, and Nick always remains so calm, tactful and with a great sense of humour . All you need to do now is chuck the captain overboard and stage a mutiny (just kidding).
Wonderful images of the spinnaker sail. I grew up sailing 420s, and everyone's favorite is spinnaker (symmetrical) on a beam reach with a spinnaker boom, and full trapeze send, surfing. I am disappointed for you that they did not make you captain. The french way is very much felt in the boat atmosphere,. Also, it probably does not help that they are all french speaking and you are not. Kudos for your positive attitude !
Just my opinion but having a swivel on the block will greatly reduce the chance of chaffing along with blending the edges. Any sharp edges is just asking for trouble as proven by your sail mate with his demo. As long as the halyard runs straight and true there isn't an issue but the second it doesn't, you got a cut halyard and shredded spinnaker. Though an expensive lesson but everyone was safe which is what really matters.
Though I'm not a fan of Cats I've come to appreciate this channel, the critical thinking process, and honesty. Keep up the good work!!
I circumnavigated with Clipper Round The World Yacht Race 2019-2020 edition. Our tactic to reduce the chance of this spinnaker halyard issue was to when possible which was most of the time have 2 halyards connected to the head of the sail. Then on every hour we adjusted the halyard tensions by alternately tightening one halyard and loosening the other. This was done entirely to eliminate having a single point of halyard chafe. We hand quite a lot of spinnaker disasters during some 40,000 nautical miles of sailing but never a snapped halyard.
That is a very cool idea. Had not thought of that! Chafe is a huge issue when doing big miles like this, but when the speeds get bigger, the threat to safety goes way way up. Someone hung up in a sheet when a spi goes over and we are talking MOB or broken bones or worse. I bet Clipper really upped your game.
What I like best about this video is Nick's honesty. He is unafraid to let us know if he doesn't like something. In all of his videos, he is not afraid to be self-critical, and he is not afraid to voice his opinion if a decision is made that he doesn't agree with and why. If he is wrong, he will admit it. All politicians out there....This is how you are supposed to act!
This 100%. Nick for President!
Nick will Make Sailing Great Again! 😂
🤣🤣🤣@@dalearmstrong2
I would make a terrible politician. lol Thank you for the kind words.
You tolerate stupidity waaaaaaay better than me Nick !! You're a meteorologist !! What a fantastic resource to have on-board yet not listened to.
Hate to say this, but that's stereotypically French arrogance for ya.
@@wrobelda 🤣
I know nothing about sailing and am totally hooked on your adventures. I absolutely love that you take the time to talk about the physics and engineering of things. Very satisfying.
I'm the same. Love the whole adventure, supplemented with the physics and engineering commentary.
He does a great job of explaining things in a way that experienced and inexperienced people can understand.
If I were on board, I'd be very grateful to have your presence.
Always a calm, sensible voice amid the chaos.
Take good care.
Thank you.
Ditto and I’d sail under Nick any time. This other guy, not a chance.
Many others Outre-mer broke their spinnaker halyard at the same point. The « retainer » IS the problem. We attached a low friction ring on it and now our halyard passes through the low friction, with more possibilities of movement. A block would have perhaps be a better choice than the retainer…
I'm sure had the skipper known, he'd have been on the lookout for that issue. Low friction ring to the rescue once again. Those things are so useful. And probably the best marine business to be in....ever....the cost .....!!!! For a smooth metal ring!!! Anyways, thanks for chiming in with first hand knowledge.
On long off wind passages such as racing top Hawaii, we always made a point to adjust the halyard tension at least twice daily so it doesn't chafe at one point
Those drone shots in heavy seas look amazing. Great job.
I absolutely love this channel, I learn so much! I feel like when we’re finally able to take the plunge, we’ll be starting with such a great foundation thanks to y’all.
Awww, thanks. That's a tremendous compliment
All I have to say is Nick, you have my respect and Outremer made a good decision in partnering with you and Megan. I'm locked in for the duration of this very interesting journey.
Outreamer made a bad decision to change captains.. Is it just me or do the French need a lesson in Sailing? EIther way they are getting one..
to be fair, you are only seeing one side of the story, biased by the narrator@@HoytFergus
this didn't age too well ;-)
As an Outrider 55 owner we were advised to make sure the spinnaker halyard where it meets the shackle was not hoisted into the halyard retainer as doing so will cause rough edges to form. My theory is that that is what has happened in this case.
Thanks for adding that. Haven't been up the mast myself, but that explanation makes sense. Would be a ton of pressure and friction there.
Would be awesome to have some close up drone shots of the spinnaker halyard in action. Maybe next time!
We have a Outremer 51 and almost lost our spinnaker to a chafed halyard on our 2021 Atlantic crossing. It also had a very long luff, and in an effort to reduce the foot chafing on the lifelines, I pulled the halyard up to high. The shackle on the halyard (same as your setup) then ground into the aluminum retainer, creating a sharp edge. We had chafe issues the rest of the way across, but could easily have lost the sail had we not found the problem in time. I suspect you might have had the same issue … unlucky
Interesting. Wonder if it was the same thing. Foot of that spi was catching on the forward stanchions as well. Captain made a little protector you'll see in some of the shots. Chafe not unique to this builder....it is an issue many if not most boats making long trips like this. What a headache!
Nick, I totally agree with your appreciation of a symmetrical spinnaker. We got a heavy duty symmetrical for our outremer 45 from 2022 and absolutely loved it on our Atlantic crossing. Once we were hit at night by a squall and it even survived 37 kts of true wind speed. A situation that felt quite scary to be honest especially when we were getting to speeds of up to 23 kts. Of course we should have doused the spinnaker before, but at some point were simply to late to react. However, it feels quite comforting to know that it even worked under these circumstances.
wow, that is incredible. I have a friend who took his old Danson 55 light across and absolutely hated the sym, so I was skeptical. I wonder if the newer boats are better with them or something.... But I loved that sail. If......IF we ever get our own boat, I am buying one for sure. Now that I think about it, I think that it is the lighter boat that is going to benefit most, because if you put an undersized spi on a heavier boat sailing DDW, it is not going to be moving very well. Hmmmm.....need me a light boat!
Yes, you are probably right, it will work best with lighter boats….we had always a smile on our face when we were surfing the waves with our symmetrical spinnaker and it worked flawless from 11/12 kts TWS up
@@TheOKellys Kinda weird I dont think I have ever sailed on a cat without a symetrical in the sail bag.
well done nick: reducing sail at night is very important lesson to learn but again as I've experienced its a delivery and delivery crews are paid by results and have to make choices most normal owner skippers wont take. i do feel for that skipper he's had his choices shown all over the internet and I hope it doesn't affect his job going forward maybe he learned a bit about your routing advice.. but folk need to remember he's paid to get a boat to where its needed on time.
I’m sure he’s also paid to deliver the boat undamaged too. They need to fix that damage before the show now
@@Corey-pd3mi you would think but parts can be fixed and I'm betting Outremer don't care. its a cost they plan for they need that boat at the show for the sales potential. regardless of cost,, the halyards is a couple of hrs at most the sails not needed for a show.. when I did deliveries for a skipper who had a contract with a similar french company they gave us a big pile of spare and tool boax it was part of the trip to fix stuff as it broke. sometimes the delivery sales were havier than the costumers sails we or the dealers would swap them out and send them back.. most boats are now shipped rather than sailed to new customers now. they let the customer do the shake downs and expected repairs. Not really surprised by the games on this trip
All I had on my 40’ tri were symmetrical spinnakers, and they worked great without the mainsail interfering. But not just for dead downwind. I put two sheets on each corner of the sail, one to the bow and one to the aft of the hull. I would usually use one side to the bow and sheet the clew to the aft spot on the other side. If you let off the bow line and sheet in the aft line, you can point quite high. It’s easy to gybe by swapping the bow and stern sheets. I never see anyone using two sheets on each side, but I really think it makes a big difference.
Back in 1985 I had a Fountaine Pajot 37' Louisiane catamaran. Asymmetricals were not usual in those days and my spinnaker was delivered with double sheets on each side as described above. I confirm that second set of sheets gives extra control of the sail, makes is much more stable and allowed for angles between 180 and 110 to 100 degrees. Hoisting and controlling the sail even single handedly was never a problem. My next cat, a Fountaine Pajot 38 Athena, was still delivered with the same setup.
Agree with that config. Would be perfect.
This series is amongst the best of the best sailing videos out there - riveting and hugely informative. Great job 👍
Wow, thank you!
Check the stitching on the inside of all the spinnaker socks, where the snuffer line runs inside a pouch. Incidence left an unfinished seam on ours, and the loose threads fouled the snuffer line. The end result was a torn spinnaker. Major manufacturing fail. If those snuffer lines aren't buttery smooth, there is a problem.
Thanks, good to know.
On my trimaran, the spinnaker halyard splice was not blocked with an appropriate whipping twine donut to operate as a stopper so that when you overwinch the halyard through the mast sheave, even worse on a rotated mast, the hard stainless steel halyard shackle may damage the mast sheave, especially on my mast where mast sheave are made of cast aluminium… causing intense shafing especially with heavy loads, and shocks when the spinnaker is whipping in the wind. Probably also damaging if you try to overstretch the halyard with a powerful electric winch on a rope that has no possible stretch. I was able to save my halyard with whipping twine and rope treatment and using a dremel to polish the mast sheave. Rope treatment is very useful to reduce rope fraying, and relatively inexpensive… it gives you time to see the problems coming before it’s too late. Color coding the halyard with marks may help to stop winching when the spinnaker is getting close to the mast sheave.
Barber haulers on sheets may help to control the chute of the spinnaker and very useful to keep the sheets off the water when things turn wrong… always easier after the facts ;-)
Unfortunately the halyards were not marked on that boat, but yes we whip the marks on all halyards on our own boats. I've seen round stoppers above the eye-splice before. That would be a good idea too.
I just got back from Grenada Sailing Week and I raced on Spirit of Everest a Leopard 47. Owner sold his J24 that we have raced for years and I must tell you the cat is way more everything. There was an Outremer 51 & 45 in our class. Outremers are beautiful 😍
Agreed. Good looking boats.
The last video was fabulous and this one is even better. Fabulous information and food for thought. The delivery had the perfect cadence as always. The words per minute was spot on as always. Maybe slightly slower than usual that gave a perfect contrast to the mayhem. I have been a long time watcher and the editing and storytelling just keeps on improving. My hats off to the executive producer…😂. All that is missing is Meghan’s dazzling smile.
Agreed. We need Megan back. Thank you for the kind words.
Omg Nick, great job in educating and focusing on sailing. It is a pleasure listening to you share your knowledge and thoughts.
I watch you guys, HTSO, Zatara, Sam Holmes and Rigging Doctor - all for years. This was the best episode for me of all as a techy person, although I do miss Megan’s smile and laughter. I’m a pilot like you- Citation X, PC12NGX, instructor on Global 5000 and volunteer instructor for disadvantaged aspiring young pilots. So I enjoy the technical thinking that goes into design, components, strategic and tactical planning and hydro-aerodynamics. Amazingly photographed, narrated and edited - Is that you or Megan? I was really psyched for this crossing and, except for Megan’s absence, its way more than I thought it would be. I send cash now and then to you and the others because I don’t like Patreon. Thanks. :-)
Wow, thanks. And as a pilot, you can appreciate the need for CRM on these boats. We could have done better there as well. Megan is just about healed up and hopefully back in the videos soon.
Wow, what content you got out of this trip, experience and reinforcement of the experience you already had. Otremere hit it out of the park having you on this trip.
Thanks for explaining everything so clearly and concisely. You do a great job teaching others about sailing.
I hope the captain gets penalised for littering, that could float on the surface and wrap around someones prop now. Causing them to have to get in the water in far less safe conditions. The seas were small. If you're fit enough to be out there flying that sail at night, you should be fit enough to clean up your mess. Goggles, a knife and a dive torch. Good video as usual Nick and respect for being candid. The same thing happened to our swivel, same brand but we caught it half way through. Clearly the manufacturer couldn't give a ....
Mast rotation dramatically increases the asym halyard exit angle and can introduce seemingly impossible chafe points.
Could the halyard splice have rubbed through on the edges of the mast where the halyard block comes through if it were hauled in tight to the mast? I think this is what you were discussing with the transfer block etc and the HLU. I'm sure Outremer will do a thorough investigation, but it would be great if you can report their findings if and when they have them and allow you to do so.
That would be my guess, but it really is a guess. I haven't taken any measurements or climbed the mast. Yeh, will be interesting to see if they follow up on this.
halyard chafe on mast sheave.
due to over hoist, as never been thoroughly rigged
Thanks for your retex.
The spliced end is minimum 40cm long (visible at 20:05), so your worries are reasonable, but I would say that the broken part (visible at 18:05) look like it is at the very end of the halyard, on the shackle eye, and doesn't look like it's on the mast part. So yeah, I really don't understand how this happened.
This is about the only channel I don't "speed" watch.
Aww, thanks Roger. Means a lot coming from you.
I don’t imagine Outremer is going to say thanks for the film.
Really great video. Love the way you narrate in a slow understandable manner. 0:47 😊
Will you be at the Outre-mer booth on Thursday in Miami?
Nope
Thumbs up to acknowledge your answer. Thumbs down for not getting a chance to meet you😊
Thank you for sharing. I really appreciate all the technical speak/teaching you take the time for.
Even though we only have a single halyard and attachment point i'm checking everything double today. We do have a 'spare' in our mast lift, which on a junk rig is to hold the boom up and adjust the height of the boom, so we could get aloft in an emergency, but I don't want to have to do that. The junk sail with just a halyard and a sheet is so wonderfully simple. Our 42' modern junk surfs a half true wind speed with full sail until about 22 when we would reef. Or, if conditions were smooth, maybe carry until 25 and surf at 12. Scow bow lifts and glides on a layer of bubbles from the rolled bow wave.
Thanks Nick for the very informative vlog. Love the coverage of your crossing. Cheers!
Good stuff. Educational and interesting.
Glad you think so!
Great learning experience for sure. Glad all are safe looks like that could have gotten ugly especially at 4am!!
Great, informative video of an unfortunate situation. Loved the drone shots!
Beautiful cinematography at the end ~ And music. I Could watch that on my big screen all day ~
As a delivery skipper , looked pretty normal LOL
Its a delivery otherwise call a carrier - and, I would done X is really so American as if theres one truth and one prefect weather forcast.
Hello Nick, I hope Megan is fully recovered now and since it's February 10, she has already re-joined you in Florida. Thanks for this interesting video. The good folks at Outremer made a common mistake on this rush to get to the "Boat Show" on time. They chose to invite two Captains for the same trip. Bad idea.
Thanks, she is feeling better now. There was only one captain, and he was 100% responsible for the boat, the crew, the voyage, and like all captains, his decisions. You might be imagining some kind of friction on board. There was none.
Tough luck on the spinnaker. All four of the spliced loops on our Para Sailor sheets started to get core hernias -- where the core bulges out between the weave of the cover. I sewed them all back in place... seemed to work. I'm a bit suspicious of these loops. I never have a problem with a bowline... but that's a knot flying around that could hit someone. Same reason you don't use metal hardware or carabiners on those connections. Instead, Dyneema soft shackles. Once a chaffing or a hernia starts it keeps getting worse.
Something with our para sailor caught and tore off the mast light. Don't know when it happened or how. Just one day we noticed it was no longer there and the screws were sheared off. Just another boat puzzle. (Be cool if a sail company put cameras at the top of a few boats and let them run whenever there's an additional head sail. See what voodoo is actually going on up there.)
We thought we had some monofilament wrapped around one of our props. Very cold water. A GoPro on a pole showed this. The next morning we heaved to, lowered the dinghy and brought it along side with me and my filleting knife, cable tied to a pole. I could trace the outline of prop and sail drive. Another GoPro inspection showed the fishing line had already fallen off, but I felt confident I could cut if off if needed. I had a dry suit (Nick recommended I have for crossing the North Pacific. Thank you) but I couldn't see a way of padding it out for insulation and then getting below the surface with it.
Have used the old knife on a boathook trick myself for kelp on the prop....any way to stay out of the Pacific water when away from the dock....cheers Will
great footage and great comments full of detail, well done Nick thanks for charing
Try to let it go. I’ve felt like this in many situations (usually at work) where the opportunity to manage is given to another…and they immediately are lacking the self confidence to use the knowledge of others and truly lead.
That person will perform quite poorly because they feel the pressure.
The only way to possibly help them succeed is to never express any concern for their decisions.
I know I know…their decisions can be absolutely awful…but the only way you can help is…actually you may not even get the chance to help because this person is so lacking confidence they cannot collaborate. But you can make it worse if they detect your concerns…they would be the awesome leader if they DID solicit genuinely the thoughts of others…but guaranteed they can’t even hear you speak once this develops.
Anyway most of this is reminders for myself coming out of a recent situation parallel to this.
I hope what you feel from my words is empathy?
I understand what you are saying, but that's not how affective crews work in my experience. Responsibility is divided and shared but the captain/skipper is the final authority with the ultimate responsibility for the boat, the crew, and the voyage. It is not the crew's responsibility to make the captain feel like a leader. If he or she is making poor decisions (in the opinion of the crew), it is their responsibility to voice those concerns. Group think leads to mistakes and sometimes accidents. I left it out of the video as to not stir this pot any further, but I told the captain in the hours before the spinnaker went overboard that given the squalls in the area and flying it at a high angle (085 apparent), we should take the spinnaker down and go to the genoa. He said he'd wait until the next day. Did that contribute to the spinnaker going overboard? I don't know...I wasn't even on watch when it happened. But, at the end of the day, the captain answers to the owner for the damage, and I do not.
I've crossed a few oceans, a few times, and it makes for very tense life on board if someone is giving the impression they know best, and this can be entirely non verbal. We understand you had your opinion, and probably voiced it (many times) to this captain, but judging from the video dialog, it was always "I'm right, they're wrong" with constant superior tone, never appearing supportive, only critical. This is not team work, especially in a serious and possibly life threatening situation, the last thing and the least helpful, is judgment. And that's all I heard here. I imagine it can't be soon enough to get to shore.
@@jmullen4658 that is a dangerous attitude.
Great video and always good to see the team working the problem and not getting on at each other, especially when it's happening in the middle of the dark and things can become fraught. Murphey's Law not during the day. Shame to lose the sail in that way and will be interested to find out any firmer conclusions but reading some of the comments there are some people with experience and knowledge of the issue so not totally isolated. Lovely when you did have the full champagne sailing and calmer conditions. Looking forward to the next video.
I stopped delivering sailboats and went commercial. 2 of my cat delivers from Annapolis to Virgin Islands during the December month is sometime rough. Getting there safely is more important then beating up yourself and the boat. Watch your cold fronts...
"Spinnakers can be pretty tough to handle when the wind pipes up".. understatement of year, especially at night.
Wow - so informative and insightful. Can’t wait to see your much anticipated ending!
Really interesting comments here. I had a spinnaker hazard blow half way across the Atlantic and luckily for us the kite kept billowing out in front so we were able to pull it in. One of the advantages of a spinnaker pole is it holds the clew up.
That was 30 years ago, however the halyard should always be lowered at least 300mm from the top so the splice doesn’t jam the sheeve. Also it clears the head of the sail from the mast which improves the windage at the top of the sail which keeps the sail fuller and relieves some of the pressure on the halyard. Shifting the halyard tension regularly is great but I always bring the sail down to inspect after every 24hr run.
Good discussion around the asymm.
I admire your attitude Nick. I probably would have been constantly harping on the captain to do the right thing and go South, especially when the weather behaved exactly as you predicted.
Thank you. Three things: first of all, the captain is a nice person-we got along just fine. Second, two+ weeks is a long time to spend with anyone, so always best to tread lightly. Lastly, while I disagree with his decisions regarding routing, those decisions did not put me or the boat in danger. It was simply inefficient and unnecessary given the conditions and forecast. Had he made dangerous decisions, you can bet the relationship would have come last.
Nick, your analysis is really good, thankfully you've filmed everything. Will there be a RECALL?
Up to Outremer to figure it out. I just don't have enough data to firmly point my finger at the cause. I can only speculate.
Wow! Great episode. Really well done all around. I could have kept watching as it went by so quick. Cheers
Hey thanks!
Another great educational episode.
Nick, one thing I haven't seen you talking about in this series is "dagger boards". Daggers boars are associated with performance cat... Were they used in this trip? What are your thoughts? Hype? Unnecessary complicated hardware with high cost? Maybe in future episode?
future episode
Nice episode Nick. I love an asymmetrical spinnaker. We crossed the whole Atlantic from Cape Town to Namibia then to St Helena and Fernando de Noronha in Brazil just on this sail. From 75 degrees until about 160 degrees as you say but I prefer in deeper downwind attaching the tack to the windward hull not the centre as this allows the sail for fly better and with the tack on a meter length of line it floats very nice in the wind. Having the tack fixed does not allow this as much. Glad you got a crossing in 😉
I'm at the point where I rarely watch a video straight through at regular speed but this was riveting.
What about a Parasailor? I recommend SHOKZ OPENFIT ear device for maintaining situational awareness. Ultimate sound and comfort. I often forget I am wearing them.😄
No direct experience with them. For a symmetrical spinnaker, we would choose something that could take 25-30 knots apparent wind. Not sure a parasailor can do that. Maybe it can, but I don't know.
Usually the downwind VMG of a monohull is significantly less than on a broad reach. But it's not true of most catamarans. In fact, there is hardly any difference at all. The boat speed may drop, but not the VMG. But I don't know the polars of the Outremer 55.
The drama is very incredible enjoy this episode
It is always good to review failures to reduce probability of additional failures.
Nick with the Asymmetrical tacked off the bow sprit, a longer luff could be an issue but releasing the tack in bigger winds not only reduces the loading but also give you lift as the tack line tension, not much but does help. Tacking off the windward bow improves the wind entering the sail beyond beam and reduces the shielding by the main.
Yes, that's how we rigged it on Clarity when we had her. Could get down to 165 no problem. More than a few good days at 170!
@@TheOKellys that spin halyard Must have a swivel just below the exit from the mast or it will chaff. If its doubled for using on code zero, the anchor should also have a chain style swivel to remove winch twist from line. Try releasing tack line to add lift and also enable you to see forward if tacked off windward hull in bigger winds. I also start engines and run hard to release load from sail down wind for socking and launch. Launching beyond 20kt winds downwind can easy blow a spin. Once you running at 10kts, AW is only 10kts.
No comment. IYKYK.
Props to the ever calm meteorologist. 🤙🏼
More of Cap'n Crunch sticking his you-know-what over the rail and deciding the course...
As always, exciting and educational. Continue to Fly safe!
I freeze framed it and there's a change in line diameter at elbow length from the eye at 20:24 showing how deep it was buried. And I think it may have been taper spliced.
Where the line goes into itself to form the eye it's failed and the only way that would happen is if when the sail flogs the tension in the line from halyard stretch pulls the eye against the halyard restrainer on the mast. Too much halyard tension not leaving enough halyard at the head of the sail as well as a poorly designed restrainer.
Calling "Clarity" and Nick back in the captains chair. The other guys would make good hands for sure. I myself learned a lot from this passage also, never underestimate a Meteor freakiin ologist.
Awesome drone shots!
Naked carbon fiber surfaces and hulls are loud.. other alternative composites are more acoustically deadening.
I thought you were gonna play "I been to the desert on a horse with no name. It felt good to get out of the rain!" Perfectly ironic for crossing on a CAT. Haha!
Did it again Nick - you absolutely nailed it - in every category. Thank you and thank you Outremer and the humble crew for making this possible! Maybe a little CRM (as from aviation) could be useful here? Just an idea from another armchair sailor fully aware that we are not entitled to giving recommendations 😉
Very kind of you to say. Yes, CRM is a valuable tool in so many endeavors. If I ever had a sailing school, it would be standard curriculum.
@@TheOKellys As as 32 year airline pilot, I see a real need in the boating community for more knowledge of CRM, Human Factors, Decision making, and Threat and Error Management. It's unfortunate there isn't more emphasis on this.
@@mountaindweller9118 absolutely agree. I’m seeing a few comments here that illustrate that need perfectly.
@@TheOKellys As a new captain (just 6-pack), I'm interested in this topic. Can you point me to books or on-line resources that discuss CRM and other human factors in the context of small yachts. There is some of this in the American Sailing Assoc training materials (e.g. Fred King's writings) but it seems very important for charters and cruises amongst people with similar experience, but differing opinions (e.g. bare boat charter trips within a sailing club group, or inter-generational family trips). Excellent videos as always! Thanks for putting the time and effort into producing great entertainment but also a great learning resource.
You can set the tack of the assym to your weather hull as opposed to the bowsprit and get a few more degrees of downwind TWA.
that's how we did it on Clarity. I made the suggestion, but no takers. Perhaps we didn't have the right shackle aboard for the tack to fly it from the weather bow. You'll notice the tack of the spi is pinned into the furling drum. That furling drum is for the Code D...not for the spinnaker which uses a sock. Anyway, yes, that would have been a good setup for our needs as we were jibing a lot with apparent wind at 135.
Nick, the tack of the A2 should not be in the furler. I have an Outremer 55, and I have another line exiting from the tip of the bowsprit where you attach the tack. It gives you a little bit more HLU space too. But I have the carbon bowsprit, and it could be different…
I can easily bring the tack to the windward bow using one of the guys of the symmetrical spinnaker. You attach it with a simple bowline.
BTW, I also love this sail…
@@cat_catarsis Agreed...only a matter of time before that furler dings up the sprit or gets ding'd. We also didn't have another set of sheets aboard, so setting the tack to the windward bow would have been tough. There were a few problems with the setup and handling. Not in the video but that spi got ripped on the spreader a couple days prior, and repaired. Don't know the circumstances as I was off-watch. With your sprit being longer, I wonder if the sail was the same measurement as yours...it should have been different.
@@TheOKellys Maybe the sails sizes for the carbon vs non carbon bowsprit are different. I don’t know. In any case, the aspect of my A2 is similar to “Big Blue” (you can see it in my profile picture), and I it works fine.
Also, for the symmetrical spi I have a set of 2 guys, in addition to the 2 sheets that are used for all the large front sails. Most likely Moonshot is lacking some of the spinnaker rigging (it is an option that you must order separately at Outremer).
Kitties or kiddies? Meow…ya know…for good luck.
I don’t know the terminology for the device where the halyard parted. I get the point about expecting it to part earlier. Though I am curious about the range of motion where the retaining bolt end is located, relative to the sail head and the mast. Where the halyard connects to the swivel, would a pendant provide better protection than an eye-splice?
I really don't know. I bet a rigger would have a better diagnosis of the problem and a solution.
@TheOKellys - Thanks for this episode of your Atlantic crossing. The one thing that would have saved the boat owner’s “Big Blue” kite would have been daily rig instructions.
Every distance race that I’ve EVER raced, of my 35 year professional career, we twice daily sent the bowman up the rig to visually inspect the halyards and standing rigging couplings as they exit the mast. That sail likely has a replacement value of around $10K, and several $-hundred to replace head swivel (if lost), and that bent stanchion on the starboard bow! They say that time is money, well 15min of going aloft via a powered deck wench would have saved all of that money and then some! Expensive decision…!
Hate to be the bowman! On Clarity we really never flew a kite at night, so we were always checking once a day at least. Chafe is a huge issue on all ocean boats. Just thought of one more cost.....that poor halyard!
Nick, your voiceover is like Butter. You should hire out for other You Tube channels or documentaries. Maybe you are the next "Sir David Attenbourough"
lol
Always helpful to have everything on 'tape.' I know, I know, old school. 🤪 Most likely will help the manufacturers to refine the tools. See you next time. ✨ 🌊 💨 ⛵️ 🏝️ ⚓️ 🌞 ✨
A spinnaker pole and associated control lines would give you the control of the foot you seek and then with careful trimming (something cruisers aren't usually on top of) you should be able to keep the kite flying well. Check a few skiff or dinghy explainer videos for proper trimming of a symmetrical spinnaker (kite) on a pole. VMG on an asym is all well and good if you compare to your probable speed running straight down without it. Plenty of racers with both options choose very carefully which they use based on their knowledge of their boats reach angles, wind speed and VMG.
I think, if we'd had any aboard the boat, we could have run sheets back to the turning blocks aft and left the guys in place. That would have given us all the control we needed. We do have friends on a Perry 43 that run poles and they seem please with their wing-on configuration.
is a spi-pole a thing on cats ? I only see them on monohulls.
There is a saying ... experience ... makes the master ... you are lucky Nick ... that you did not get in to a bigger trouble ... better to go the less aggressive ... but safer ... way ... how is the Lady M doing?
There is nothing as nice as a nice spinny run. There can always be disagreements with the person in charge, Capitan or Navigator. However, the CO is the CO. Responsibility and consequences are on them. It is also impressive to see the size of the mast and sheet close up. Gives you an idea how large the boat is.
This experience of braking the halyard is all the evidence I need. I have long held that the captain must have a mix of talents and able to switch gears in the analysis and subsequent synthesis to make sound decisions. Some times the book doesn't tell you what to do.
Ever try the "5 Why" process to analysis to find the cause of a failure?
So much good information in the is video, thank you Nick!!!!
Very entertaining, I appreciate your attempt at trying to walk the tightrope and could only chuckle, chuckle alot.
I didn't see coming all the ass covering though. Route planning is one thing, but the halyard fiasco caught me off guard.
Anyhoo, great stuff ! , and keep up the good work.
I usually prefer the term "After Action Review" to "Post Mortem", but I guess in this case I guess it is a PM, such a shame to lose a sail. Very interesting to get the real use feedback on the different downwind sails. Have a whole new appreciation for the symmetrical spinnaker. (And that Murphy guy sure takes advantage of any situation).
I'm not a sailor, but it seems that boat would be too much for you two to handle safely. Every boat, every motorcycle, every bike is a compromise. None can do everything you'd like to do in every situation. Seems the search for a performance boat gives up a lot in livability and ease of a couple sailing safely. Getting there safely is more important than getting there fast. Love the channel, thanks for the content.
After watching the last episode, I found myself a little perplexed about the circumstances of this passage. The idea of relying just on instincts and not use any of the available tools to plan the route seems like an unnecessary risk.
Amen.
It's also tension between old romantic France and new technocratic France.
The trouble with weather forecasts is the inbuilt 40% margin of error,being on the water and reading cloud,waves and wind direction and varying wind speeds is where captains knowledge and experience come into play,rule number 1 from captain Ron’s rule book,if it’s going to happen,it’s going to happen out there on the water.
The Forecast from NICK doesn't have errors built in. Dip sh*t. He is the meteorologist and Airplane pilot to boot. Are you just off your meds?
@@svthorasailing4868REMIND ME PLEASE not to go sailing with you. Omfg.
Hmm ... I would still be interested who/what to blame ... 🙂 ... so any conclusion what chafed the halyard ?
1. A schedule on a sailboat? 2. Cut the corner? 3. Crossing the Atlantic in Feb? 4. As you noted, a spinnaker at night? When you’re not racing with a big crew? Well, it all makes for ‘interesting’ entertainment.
I love your videos, but when I watch sailing videos it reinforces my love of power yachting. 😊
This is a great series - haven't done much sailing at all, but this is so educational regarding technical issues, and also what may happen at sea regarding politics, lol (and how best to handle that). Also beautiful photography - abs riveting, and Nick always remains so calm, tactful and with a great sense of humour . All you need to do now is chuck the captain overboard and stage a mutiny (just kidding).
Very cool episode.
As always the adventure of a lifetime 🎉 still wonder what is up with that line parting?
Very interesting to watch and see how things unfold.
Could you offer a 4K wallpaper with a cat heading left under all sails in the right side of the screen (left is for icons) in sun weather?
Wonderful images of the spinnaker sail. I grew up sailing 420s, and everyone's favorite is spinnaker (symmetrical) on a beam reach with a spinnaker boom, and full trapeze send, surfing.
I am disappointed for you that they did not make you captain. The french way is very much felt in the boat atmosphere,. Also, it probably does not help that they are all french speaking and you are not. Kudos for your positive attitude !
Fantastic team work
Another great video sharing and teaching some solid lessons. Nice one mate!
Thank you my friend. The best we can do is learn from the mistakes. And one day we might know a thing or two.
"RIP" Big Baby Blue... She will be missed😢
Nicks not happy !!
Just my opinion but having a swivel on the block will greatly reduce the chance of chaffing along with blending the edges. Any sharp edges is just asking for trouble as proven by your sail mate with his demo. As long as the halyard runs straight and true there isn't an issue but the second it doesn't, you got a cut halyard and shredded spinnaker. Though an expensive lesson but everyone was safe which is what really matters.