Spinnaker-replacement Kite
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James V
- Admiral
- Posts: 1705
- Joined: Sat Jan 22, 2005 9:33 am
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26M
- Location: Key West, Fl USA, 26M 06, Merc 50hp BF "LYNX"
Spinnaker-replacement Kite
Has anyone put a spinnaker-replacement kite on a Mac?
Per the reports they can
"Pull the boat up on plane
Surf or plane longer"
See link -
http://www.kiteship.com/id2.html
Per the reports they can
"Pull the boat up on plane
Surf or plane longer"
See link -
http://www.kiteship.com/id2.html
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Rich Smith
- Engineer
- Posts: 114
- Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2004 5:50 am
- Duane Dunn, Allegro
- Admiral
- Posts: 2459
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 6:41 pm
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Bellevue, Wa '96 26x, Tohatsu 90 TLDI and Plug In Hybrid Electric drive
- Contact:
- Duane Dunn, Allegro
- Admiral
- Posts: 2459
- Joined: Fri Jan 02, 2004 6:41 pm
- Sailboat: MacGregor 26X
- Location: Bellevue, Wa '96 26x, Tohatsu 90 TLDI and Plug In Hybrid Electric drive
- Contact:
Bill, http://www.boats4sail.info , sells the stock mac spinnaker for $400. The one here, http://www.macgregorsails.com , is $495.
Many are now waiting to see what the new one shown in the 2005 M photo's will cost. It includes a extension sprit that mounts to the bow. Looks to be much better than the original, at least it's more colorful. The rumor is that it will also work on an X. Sounds like it may be available in March. I'm sure Bill at Boats for sail will have a good price on it just like he does for all the other mac products.
Here are pictures of the two factory sails
http://www.macgregor26.com/spinnakers.htm
Many are now waiting to see what the new one shown in the 2005 M photo's will cost. It includes a extension sprit that mounts to the bow. Looks to be much better than the original, at least it's more colorful. The rumor is that it will also work on an X. Sounds like it may be available in March. I'm sure Bill at Boats for sail will have a good price on it just like he does for all the other mac products.
Here are pictures of the two factory sails
http://www.macgregor26.com/spinnakers.htm
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waternwaves
- Admiral
- Posts: 1499
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 8:18 pm
- Location: X less in North Puget Sound -have to sail other boats for a while
other thread on kitesails...
This earlier thread started a discussion on the kites also...halfway down the page or so....
sailmods & Kitesail thread 15179
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sailmods & Kitesail thread 15179
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kite sail
Hmmmm, ya mean thats not how I'm suppose to use my spinaker???
(pic of the yellow one looks like me using mine. ( mine was a disgard from dumb or rich person, found it in the dumpster at the marina.) A little faded, but the price was right. Hard part is getting it down.
(pic of the yellow one looks like me using mine. ( mine was a disgard from dumb or rich person, found it in the dumpster at the marina.) A little faded, but the price was right. Hard part is getting it down.
Just some input on kites.
They need about 10+ true to fly and pull. Anything lighter than that and you end up with fighting it not flying it. I considered one for the raceboat and went out on a couple of runs to try them, and unfortunately they just don't perform the way i wanted them to under 10 knots.
You need 3 winches. One for the halyard, one for each guy. It's busy work but can be run double or single hand. You don't just throw the puppy up and it does all the work.
They are more stable than a regular chute in a breeze because it isn't "pinned" to the boat and force the boat into a broach or round-up. That was nice. Since the sail actually lifts not drags the boat you need to make sure the attachement points for the winches are solid or you can rip out the hardware out of the deck.
Overall, fun sails. Would love one to race with but where we race we don't get that many 10+ knot days of wind. It would be a hoot for when we do Vic-Maui though.
They need about 10+ true to fly and pull. Anything lighter than that and you end up with fighting it not flying it. I considered one for the raceboat and went out on a couple of runs to try them, and unfortunately they just don't perform the way i wanted them to under 10 knots.
You need 3 winches. One for the halyard, one for each guy. It's busy work but can be run double or single hand. You don't just throw the puppy up and it does all the work.
They are more stable than a regular chute in a breeze because it isn't "pinned" to the boat and force the boat into a broach or round-up. That was nice. Since the sail actually lifts not drags the boat you need to make sure the attachement points for the winches are solid or you can rip out the hardware out of the deck.
Overall, fun sails. Would love one to race with but where we race we don't get that many 10+ knot days of wind. It would be a hoot for when we do Vic-Maui though.
