Three Bridge Fiasco (Doublehanded) at Singlehanded Sailing SocietyJanuary 30
Story
Fantastic day during the Three Bridge and Great turn out with 25 e27s participating.
SSS TBF Trophy Meeting Oakland Yacht Club, 7:30 pm Wednesday, February 10th.

Congratulations to the winners!

DH : El Raton (6th out of 284 overall) Recap by Ray
SH : TAZ!! (1st out of 41 overall) Recap by George
Result
PosBoatTotalRace 1
1El Raton11
2Shenanigans22
3Witchy Woman33
4Chile Dog44
5Peaches55
6Wile E Coyote66
7Light'n Up77
8Verve88
9Take Five99
10Taz!!1010
11Ergo1111
12Abigail Morgan1212
13Desperado1313
14Magic1414
15Magic Bus1515
16Thumper1616
17Dianne1717
18Opa!1818
19Get Happy!!20DNF
19Moxie20DNF
19Swampdonkey20DNF
19Attack From Mars20DNF
19Wetsu20DNF
19Mirage20DNF
19Discotheque20DNS
19Elise20DNS
export csv

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Author: Bryan Myers ([email protected]) contact the author
Subject: Jib Sheet attachment
Info: (17546 views) Posted: Monday 12-23-13 07:14:57 PM
two bowlines two lines for us. One additional benefit to this is wearing the sheet more evenly then you would if the same ends were always shackled to the clew.

I've thought of all sorts of other options but never tried any.

We have a soft shackle on the spinnaker halyard. I'm considering adding those to all the sheets as well (I would like to hear from those who have tried these too). I would guess these would be faster than a bowline but not as fast as something that can just be snapped on.

I would never put on a hard shackle. To dangerous and damaging.

:: We had a running debate on Moxie at the end of last
:: season about how best to attach the sheets. We had a set
:: with a Tylaska spliced on, but managed to throw that
:: overboard. Since that time we have luggage tagged a long
:: sheet in the middle and twin tailed it back. We also
:: experimented with it as a continuous sheet tied with 2
:: bowlines.
::
:: Each method has its strengths and weaknesses. We do have
:: to change sails here periodically, so the Tylaska was
:: nice for quick changes, but it's expensive and it's a
:: piece of metal banging around up there. The luggage tag
:: is simple, but is hard to untie after sailing with it
:: for any length of time and impossible to change out on
:: the fly. We took to tying a second sheet on the sail we
:: expected to replace whatever headsail we started with
:: and replaced sails and sheets on the swap. Running the
:: sheets again was kind of a hassle. The bowlines are a
:: little quicker to swap out, and you can undo the lazy
:: sheet first, but is still slower than the Tylaska and
:: the bowlines can hang up on the shrouds.
::
:: Soft shackles look interesting, but seem like they would
:: be pretty slow to swap too? What are most folks using
:: down there?

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