What does lifting a sodden MOB out of the drink and tensioning the backstay have in common? Well, unless you're sailing a very small dinghy, they both make use of mechanical advantage to multiply the force of the human arm. Also known as purchase, there are several ways to turn a small force into a big one without having to resort to electrical power.
Our boats are full of such systems. Even dinghies have a system of multiple blocks to help trim the mainsheet, for instance. If you sail a larger boat, you're likely to have the same thing to move the sheet travellers. Winches are nothing if not an age-old mechanism to gear down for extra power, as is the big wheel on the backstay tensioner. Hydraulic power achieves the same thing using fluid dynamics.
So, we’re surrounded by purchase systems on board. But do they handle their job well, and can they generate sufficient power to make your task lighter? New-built yachts should come with winches and blocks correctly sized to handle the sails, but it’s not always the case with older boats. Sometimes builders will have miscalculated the forces acting on the rig, and sometimes previous owners will have made changes to the original sail plans or rig loads – by adding a bowsprit, for example, or a square-top main. Changing rigging runs with extra blocks to bring mast foot lines back to the cockpit is another classic example.
Common purchase systems
Mainsheet: Even 30-40ft boats will often have a winch-free mainsheet that relies instead on an arrangement of triple blocks giving 6:1 purchase.
Backstay: Stay terminates well before the deck with a block, through which a line is run, itself terminating in an ever-decreasing cascade of blocks. In this way you can achieve enormous purchase – I found an example of 48:1.
この記事は Yachting Monthly UK の Summer 2024 版に掲載されています。
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この記事は Yachting Monthly UK の Summer 2024 版に掲載されています。
7 日間の Magzter GOLD 無料トライアルを開始して、何千もの厳選されたプレミアム ストーリー、9,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスしてください。
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