SAIL

ASK SAIL

WHY ALL THE MEMBRANE SAILS?

Q: I am noticing more and more cruising boats carrying high-tech membrane sails, and I was wondering why that is.

—Carter Dickens, Houston, TX

BRIAN HANCOCK REPLIES

It’s all about the engineering. Specifically, membrane sails are highly engineered, so you can end up with a sail that is almost half the weight of a similar sail made out of Dacron. Why is this important, you ask? Basically, heavier sails will result in more weight aloft, and that will increase the heeling and pitching moment of the boat. That in turn, over a long passage, results in fatiguing the crew, which is why so many cruisers are opting for

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Sail

Sail12 min read
Home Is The Sailor
I am sailing with Robin Lee Graham, but there is no wind. It’s a hot day in July and Montana’s Flathead Lake is glass. The mountains around us are blurred by haze. A wildfire burns to our east. Robin’s blue eyes light up—he’s spotted catspaws ahead.
Sail2 min read
Airmar DST810 Smart Multisensor
Let’s be honest: Transducers aren’t as sexy as the cool graphics and touchscreen capabilities of today’s navigation and electronics packages. But the information that those packages deliver, like speed and depth, is only as good as the instrument tha
Sail4 min read
Daniel Hays and Sparrow
Daniel Hays, at age 63, is now almost 10 years older than his father David was when they sailed around Cape Horn together in a tiny 25-foot cutter named Sparrow. That was back in the mid-1980s. They co-wrote a book about their adventure and spent sev

Related Books & Audiobooks