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Bullseye Tuning Guide
The stable, safe Bullseye provides wonderful racing. Since
it is a fairly heavy under powered boat, to get the best upwind performance
the sails need to be trimmed so they are full and twisted in most conditions.
Mast Tuning:
Spreader length and angle
Free Swing? Yes, should pull the shrouds in ½ to 1” from
the straight line.
Step position?
Is there any choice? No
Headstay and shroud tension:
General, tight or loose: moderate to loose
Main Trim:
To trim the main to best advantage rig a bridle. The object of the bridle
is to enable the boom to be trimmed close to the centerline, without
over tightening the leech of the mainsail. Rig the bridle by attaching
a single block fixed at the center. Tie or run the ends of the line
through the normal mainsheet blocks on the aft deck. When properly adjusted
the length of the two bridle lines (equal on both sides of the boat)
should hold the sheeting block just below the boom, over the centerline
of the boat when the mainsheet is trimmed to make the top batten parallel
to the boom.
Mainsheet trim:
To judge proper mainsheet trim, sight from under the boom, and trim
sufficiently so the top batten is parallel to the boom. We recommend
installing a head knocker type mainsheet cleat forward of the skipper’s
position. Too little trim will reduce pointing and trimming too tight
will increase weather helm and slow the boat. This allows the helmsman
to adjust the mainsheet while keeping the boat on course.
Main Outhaul:
Your North main has a lens shaped piece of light material fitted to
the bottom of the sail. This allows easing the outhaul to make the bottom
of the sail much fuller. In under 16 knots of breeze, ease the outhaul
until the lens foot is completely open. Sometimes, easing a little more
works well too. When it blows hard tightening the outhaul flattens the
main sufficiently to sail easily in 25 knots of breeze without excessive
heeling.
Cunningham:
Allow the lower half of the main to develop significant wrinkles. Tightening
the cunningham to pull the wrinkles completely out pulls the draft in
the main too far forward, and reduce pointing.
Jib adjustment:
There are two important items here. Set the wishbone between the bottom
hank and the second hank instead of the 2nd one. Use a light piece of
line to support the wishbone at the half way point. This allows the
top of the jib to twist properly, because the clew can rise up as the
sheet is eased. The other point is there should be a telltale on the
top batten.
Jib sheet:
The jib trimmer uses this telltale to determine proper jib trim which
is just as critical to good speed and pointing as mainsail trim and
needs to be adjusted more often. When the jib is trimmed correctly,
the telltale will just be flowing. To determine this trimming point,
while the helmsman steers the boat on the wind, the crew pulls the jib
in until the telltale flutters then eases it out until it flows again.
It is helpful when speed drops coming out of tacks or when sailing into
bid waves, to ease the jib sheet. Paying close attention to the leech
telltale helps determine how much ease is best. The helmsman needs to
steer the boat so the weather telltale on the luff of the jib lays down,
but when the leeward telltale flutters, the sheet should be eased until
the boat can be headed up again.
Clew Position:
Clew position is determined by the wishbone setting.
Jib Halyard:
Be careful not to over tension the jib halyard. Set it so there is a
slight hint of horizontal wrinkles in the jib luff. In a breeze these
will show up at the hanks. In lighter air they should show evenly along
the luff tape.
For more information on Cal 20 sails,
contact:
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