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NasiGoreng said...
i had to practice heaps of planing whilst "straight downwinding" to really figure out when and what the sail does during gybes.
you can actually execute 3/4 of a fast planing gybe without having to flick the sail.
i just kept hooning downwind , going left to right and back with wind behind me and the wind made the gybe/ sail flick timing apparent.
got to say i now have it sussed.
hooked in, fast powered up downwinding also helped me with board reactions.....bit of toe pressure here, board turns....bit of heel pressure there....board turns..
it definately helps to have a nice steady wind mind!!
Does sound like an intensive gybathon. Present wind speeds just reinforce my conclusion that bogging down while in "spinnaker" downwind mode makes it impossible to accelerate back to a plane because the full wind power is exerted then on the top of the sail. So this exercise is more "broad reach to broad reach" than "straight downwinding" ? ie keeping some "suck" working in the sail so the loose leech can work?
Guy Cribb does stress "throwing the sail forward" , but we see no such thing in Sailquik's flat high speed gybes.