I have trouble with lee helm on my 28, especially as the wind gets a bit stronger. I have tried trimming sails, moving the mast aft and raking it as the book suggests, but never manage to eradicate the lee helm completely. Lee helm is annoying and hard work on the tiller. It can be dangerous, because the boat pays off down wind instead of luffing up if you lose control. It seemed to me that reefing the sails (as you do in strong winds!) was making matters worse, since the C of E was moving forwards when I needed it to move aft. It occurred to me that it would be an improvement to keep setting the genoa and No 1 jib on the stemhead forestay, but when the No 2 was needed (say, about force 6) it should be set on an inner forestay thus tending to keep the C of E aft and incidentally, retaining a more efficient slot with the mainsail. Indeed, it may be that the rig would be more efficient altogether, if you reefed down to the No 2 jib without reefing the mainsail.
So, last season, I tried rigging up an inner forestay. The stay itself worked OK, I rigged it from a strong point I fitted about 1 metre below the masthead to an eye plate in the after part of the anchor well. So that it wouldn't intrude on normal sloop rig, particularly when close tacking up narrow creeks - something I do a lot - I made it just long enough so that it would stow onto the existing babystay eyeplate when not wanted. I shackled a piece of chain onto the new eyeplate in the well that was just long enough to make up the difference in length between the two stay positions. The bottle screw stays with the inner forestay so that it can be tightened either in stowed or working positions with a minimum of effort. I am looking out for a pelican hook or some other quick release device to make setting up the stay easier, but for the moment, I use a standard clevis pin with an 'R' pin to secure it instead of a split pin.
I also got a secondhand sail roughly equivalent to a number two headsail (about 9 square metres) that my calculations showed would fit in the area. I siezed some sheet blocks to the coach roof handrails and waited for a force 6.
Well. The rig balanced a lot better than it did before. I managed well enough in force 6 with 3 rolls in the main and the new headsail (staysail?) set on the inner forestay whereas I would have kept the working jib and put 6 rolls in the main before. The boat seemed to have plenty of go and had a neutral helm. Three things spoilt the party, though. I kept getting riding turns on the winches because the sheet leads were too high. The winches were not powerful enough. I couldn't sheet the new sail in as hard as I would have liked because the shrouds got in the way.
What to do? The basic idea seems to be sound - and possibly a lot of fun, thinking about setting both headsails together to give a true cutter rig. Sorting out better sheeting positions and stronger winches is easy enough, but moving the main shrouds?
One thought comes to mind which I could try out readily enough this season. I could reduce the length of the foot of the staysail, move the sheeting positions forward and sheet inside the main shrouds. Reducing the sail area would also ease the load on my Barton 2 speeds as well. I'd be very grateful for any comments, though, before I start cutting up my sail!
Cheers! Neil
Neil Sinclair
Seal 28/27
'Andiamo of Exe'