Great info and from someone who knows about dip pole or other kite maneuvers!
If the after guard, including the trimmers, are paying attention the 
appropriate sheets and guys are in their proper places, just displaced from 
each other fore and aft as my tactician prefers.
I am now convinced that the sheets and guys will be in their proper places 
after the kite is hoisted and doused as described for port rounding—thus there 
is not likely that keeping the guys forward and sheets aft will be 
significantly slower than having them paired athwartship.
Thanks for your reply—it has converted me!!
Charlie NelsonWater Phantom



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On Thursday, December 1, 2022, 3:34 PM, ALAN BERGEN via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote:

I have been doing dip pole gybes for forty + years. My primary winches are 
forward on the coaming and secondaries are aft (like yours). The primaries are 
always used for the guys and the genoa sheets and the secondaries are always 
used for the spinnaker sheets. Since you are rounding the windward mark on 
starboard tack, the genoa sheet is on the port primary, and the starboard 
primary is free to use for the spinnaker guy. When you round the leeward mark 
on starboard tack, the port primary is free to use for the genoa sheet. As soon 
as you round at either the windward or leeward mark, the port primary is free 
if you want to tack or gybe. If you use a spinnaker staysail, the primary is 
used for the staysail sheet, after the genoa is dropped or furled. Try this the 
next time you're out and you'll see how simple it is.
Alan Bergen35 Mk III ThirstyRose City YCPortland, OR



On Thu, Dec 1, 2022 at 11:42 AM Charlie Nelson via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote:

My tactician and I have a friendly disagreement on which winches to use when 
doing dip pole jibes with lazy sheets and 'guys' on my masthead rig C&C 36 
XL/kcb:
On Water Phantom, I have moved the initial primary winches (Lewmar ST 50s) 
forward on the cockpit coaming and added another secondary winch pair (Lewmar 
ST 44s) at the aft end of the cockpit coaming. Thus my secondaries are hardly 
secondary in strength and power ratios, etc.
All our races have port roundings and most are W-L. Thus we are on starboard 
tack at either the windward or leeward mark. I am no expert on dip-pole jibes 
but as I thought thru the sequence of events at the turning mark on starboard 
tack, it seemed intuitive to me to rig the kite with a starboard pole always 
(we never do jib sets!), using the aft secondary winches for both the sheet and 
the guy on the kite. This leaves the forward primary winches committed to the 
headsail as we make the turn at the mark.
After the turn, the primary winches can be cleared of the headsail sheets and 
the other set of kite lines (sheet and guy) can be rigged on these primary 
winches. When it comes time to jibe, the aft secondary kite lines become lazy 
and the trimmers use the primary winches--note the primary and secondary 
winches are only about 2 feet apart. For the next jibe, the trimmers move to 
the aft secondary winches and so on...
At the leeward mark, always on starboard for port roundings, the kite is back 
to being controlled by the aft secondaries (as at the windward mark) and the 
forward primaries can be loaded with the headsail sheets in anticipation of the 
beat to windward just as they were positioned at the windward mark. I like this 
symmetry (but then I am mostly a left-hander!) and think it involves less line 
switching, less time and might be faster than using a forward set of winches 
for both guys, etc.
OTOH, my tactician races mainly in a one design Beneteau 41S fleet in Chicago 
where the primary forward winches have both guys on them, the aft secondary 
winches are used for both sheets always. (I think this is because the 
secondaries might be pretty small on the 41S and they and/or the crew may not 
be able to handle the guys on the secondary aft winches). 
Since I have no problem with using Lewmar 44s as primary winches, I have the 
option to do the winches ala the Chicago way or the Water Phantom way. Before I 
commit to having the crew learn how to do these winch swaps as we go from jibe 
to jibe, I want to choose the best way to handle the winches and stick with it 
through the season.
What do the list racers think of these alternatives?
Thanks in advance,

Charlie NelsonWater Phantom1995 C&C 36 XL/kcbNew Bern, NC
 

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Thanks for your help.
Alan Bergen
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contribution at:
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Thanks for your help.
Charlie Nelson


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Thanks for your help.

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