Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 27 de may. de 2019 · Lowering the sails basically involves carrying out the sail hoisting procedure in reverse order. First the jib is lowered or furled, then the main. The jib can be furled anytime.

  2. 19 de feb. de 2023 · Whether you’re going to be unfurling or raising depends entirely on how your boat stores its sails. How mainsails can be stored: Lowered and lashed onto the boom; Lowered into a stack pack (a long bag permanently mounted above the boom) Rolled into the mast (mast-furled mainsail) Rolled onto the boom (boom-furled mainsail)

  3. 12 de jun. de 2010 · Cleaning your mast track and the slugs or slides, and converting any mast boltrope sails to slugs/slides will greatly reduce the friction in the system. Lubing the mast track with McLube SailKote once a month or so will help a lot.

  4. 18 de nov. de 2015 · Striking Sail (lowering) Sails are taken down or furled in the reverse order of their set. Head sails, starting with furthest forward, and then the mainsail are struck or lowered. Headsails.

  5. sandiegosailingadventures.com › 2015/11/18-raisingRaising Sails | Sail Liberty

    18 de nov. de 2015 · Raising Sails. Sails are raised or lowered by lines called halyards. A gaff sail is raised using a halyard for the throat and a halyard for the peak, and must be raised together. Halyards are named for the sails they raise, for example the main throat halyard raises the throat of the mainsail.

  6. 11 de feb. de 2019 · I've done a ton of research to learn how to recognize every boat type - based on the sails and mast configuration. In this video I'll tell you what I've learned. ...more. https://improvesailing...

    • 22 min
    • 97.6K
    • Improve Sailing
  7. Storm sails are heavy-duty sails specifically designed to withstand the most severe weather conditions, including hurricane-force winds. Storm sails are typically smaller and stronger than regular sails, with reinforced stitching and heavy-duty materials.