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Reefing

 
Reefing

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Reefing



 
 
Reefing is a sailing manoeuvre intended to reduce the area of a sail
Sail

A sail is any type of surface intended to generate thrust by being placed in a wind—in essence a vertically-oriented wing. Sails are used in sailing....
 on a sailboat
Sailboat

A sailboat or sailing boat is a boat propelled partly or entirely by sails. The term covers a variety of boats, larger than small vessels such as sailboards and smaller than sailing ships, but distinctions in size are not strictly defined and what constitutes a sailing ship, sailboat, or a smaller vessel varies by region and culture....
 or sailing ship
Sailing ship

Sailing ship is now used to refer to any large wind-powered vessel. In technical terms, a ship was a sailing vessel with a full rigged ship of at least three masts, square rigged on all of them, making the sailing adjective redundant....
, which can improve the ship's stability and reduce the risk of capsizing
Capsize

The common definition for capsized refers to when a boat or ship is tipped over until disabled. The act of reversing a capsized vessel is called righting....
, broaching
Broach (sailing)

A sailboat broaches when its Course suddenly changes towards the wind due to wind/sail interactions for which hull hydrodynamic reactions cannot compensate....
, or damaging sails or boat hardware in a strong wind. Modern sailboats often combine reefing and furling
Furl (sailing)

Furling refers to stowing or dousing a boat's sail by flaking , packing , roller furling or just lowering it onto the deck . Nowadays, it is becoming more common to use the term "furling" to refer to reefing a sail that is part of a roller furling system....
 of sails, as shown in fully furled Genoa
Genoa (sail)

The genoa or jenny was originally referred to as the 'overlapping jib' or the Genoa jib, being named after the city of Genoa as explained below....
 headsail
Headsail

A headsail of a sailing vessel is any sail set forward of the foremost mast . The most common headsails are the jib and its larger cousin the genoa , but there are a large number of others, such as the staysail....
 of the Bavaria 36
Bavaria Yachtbau

The Bavaria Yachtbau GmbH is a Germany major yacht builder, with its headquarters in Giebelstadt, Bavaria, Germany. The model range consists of both sailing and motor yachts, of which especially the sailing yachts are very common....
 in the image at right.

There are three common methods of reefing: conventional, roller, and jiffy.






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Bavaria 36 Kroatien 2006
Reefing is a sailing manoeuvre intended to reduce the area of a sail
Sail

A sail is any type of surface intended to generate thrust by being placed in a wind—in essence a vertically-oriented wing. Sails are used in sailing....
 on a sailboat
Sailboat

A sailboat or sailing boat is a boat propelled partly or entirely by sails. The term covers a variety of boats, larger than small vessels such as sailboards and smaller than sailing ships, but distinctions in size are not strictly defined and what constitutes a sailing ship, sailboat, or a smaller vessel varies by region and culture....
 or sailing ship
Sailing ship

Sailing ship is now used to refer to any large wind-powered vessel. In technical terms, a ship was a sailing vessel with a full rigged ship of at least three masts, square rigged on all of them, making the sailing adjective redundant....
, which can improve the ship's stability and reduce the risk of capsizing
Capsize

The common definition for capsized refers to when a boat or ship is tipped over until disabled. The act of reversing a capsized vessel is called righting....
, broaching
Broach (sailing)

A sailboat broaches when its Course suddenly changes towards the wind due to wind/sail interactions for which hull hydrodynamic reactions cannot compensate....
, or damaging sails or boat hardware in a strong wind. Modern sailboats often combine reefing and furling
Furl (sailing)

Furling refers to stowing or dousing a boat's sail by flaking , packing , roller furling or just lowering it onto the deck . Nowadays, it is becoming more common to use the term "furling" to refer to reefing a sail that is part of a roller furling system....
 of sails, as shown in fully furled Genoa
Genoa (sail)

The genoa or jenny was originally referred to as the 'overlapping jib' or the Genoa jib, being named after the city of Genoa as explained below....
 headsail
Headsail

A headsail of a sailing vessel is any sail set forward of the foremost mast . The most common headsails are the jib and its larger cousin the genoa , but there are a large number of others, such as the staysail....
 of the Bavaria 36
Bavaria Yachtbau

The Bavaria Yachtbau GmbH is a Germany major yacht builder, with its headquarters in Giebelstadt, Bavaria, Germany. The model range consists of both sailing and motor yachts, of which especially the sailing yachts are very common....
 in the image at right.

There are three common methods of reefing: conventional, roller, and jiffy. The latter two make sail-handling easier and allow reefing to be done with fewer crew members.

Conventional reefing

Sails may have built-in alternate attachment points that allow their area to be reduced. In a mainsail, one to four horizontal rows of cringle
Cringle

A cringle is a device surrounding a hole in a textile, designed to protect the edges of the hole from abrasion. In nautical settings, cringles are often found along the edges and in the corners of sails....
s, called reef points, may be placed above the foot of the sail. Tying the sail to the boom at these reef points forms a new tack and clew and reduces the sail's area. More than one row of reef points increases options for possible sail area. To perform the reef, a crewman must pull the reefing line as another crewman is lowering the sail. Reefing is used mostly when the winds are too strong and are overpowering the boat and the steering.

Roller reefing

Roller reefing involves rolling or wrapping the sail around a wire, foil, or spar
Spar

In sailing, a spar is a round pole of timber or metal used on a sailing ship. In modern usage it often refers to the Mast , but historically the term was used more broadly to refer to the various Boom s, gaffs, yardarm, etc., of heavily "sparred" wooden ships....
 to reduce the sail's exposure to the wind. The mainsail is wrapped around the boom
Boom (sailing)

In sailing, a boom is a spar , along the Parts of a sail#The edges of a fore and aft rigged sail, that greatly improves control of the angle and shape of the sail....
, which contains a mechanism in the gooseneck
Gooseneck

The gooseneck is the swivel connection on a sailboat by which the Boom attaches to the Mast . The boom moves from side to side and up and down by swiveling on the gooseneck....
 that rolls in the sail--or special hardware inside the boom or mast is used to reef the sail by winding it around a rotating foil. These latter systems are known as mainsail furling systems. Conventional roller reefing on a rotating boom can be difficult and time-consuming, typically requiring a crew member to work at the mast in heavy weather. By comparison, furling systems operate easily through control lines led to the cockpit. Roller reefing allows a more gradual and controllable method of reefing than conventional or jiffy reefing.

Jiffy reefing

Jiffy reefing, also called slab reefing or single line reefing, is quicker and easier than conventional reefing or conventional roller reefing and involves folding the sail in sections, or slabs, along the boom. One or two reefing lines placed through the reef cringles at the sail's luff and leach edges are used to pull those points down tight to the boom, creating a new tack and clew for the sail. Reefing lines can be led back to the cockpit, and crew members can perform reefing without going on deck in heavy weather. In jiffy reefing there is no need to tie to the boom at the reef cringles on the sail. The equipment for jiffy reefing is often integrated with Dutchman flaking, a furling
Furl (sailing)

Furling refers to stowing or dousing a boat's sail by flaking , packing , roller furling or just lowering it onto the deck . Nowadays, it is becoming more common to use the term "furling" to refer to reefing a sail that is part of a roller furling system....
 technology that flakes (or folds up) the sail on alternate sides of the boom rather than on a messy pile on one side of the boom.