by tokyotrashbaby » Tue Apr 05, 2011 10:23 am
all valid points mentioned. a quick rundown for everyone who is wondering or looking for options on doing the ayso thing.
"Connecting the Ayso"
1. make sure your halyard is running up the mast freely, and isnt inside, around, or between anything like stays or spreaders. and tie it on
2. grab the sheets, and ensure they are OUTSIDE EVERYTHING. and tie them on.
3. grab your tack line. make sure it runs OUTSIDE EVERYTHING. now when you hook it up remember this saying "Tack on top". meaning; make sure you run your tack back to the kite bag but is on top of your sheets the whole way back. (this will eliminate hoisting and having outside sheets.)
aslong as you have everything running outside the boat your hoist should be foul-up free. i have seen many times kites being hoisted inside spreaders etc. not cool.
"The Hoist"
1. have the three corners ready to run and hanging out of the bag.
2. go nuts and hoist the halyard
3. when the halyard gets to the second spreader start on the tack aswell.
4. both corners should hit thier limit at roughly the same time.
5. sheet on. if it is light and/or doesnt fill easily heat the boat up a bit untill it fills and then promptly bear away and ease the chute to flatten the boat.
6 hold on.
tips;
-i know kevin was talking about hoisting under the jib. i would steer clear from doing that. i have never done that and never will. easy way to add unwanted friction to the hoist, make the ayso even easier to fill with water and turn into a casting net for prawns, as well as allowing the chute to fill before the hoist is completed.
- we hoist from behind the sidestays, leeward hoist. this keeps the kite sucked behind the main as it goes up allowing it not to fill until the tack exposes the chute to the breeze.
- if your doing w/l then you can hoist and drop from under the lowers and saves you dragging it around the wires in a windward drop.
"The GYBE!!!"
this varies slightly depending on pole choices, but lets keep it simple and leave the pole as a fixed one.
1. as the skipper starts to bear the boat away to go deep, easy the sheet out allowing it to float the clew out.
2. when the clew gets to about where the forestay is the skipper should turn the boat, the main needs to be thrown across and the sheet hand with the chute, needs to pull like crazy on the "new" sheet (skipper can feed the old sheet through the blocks to help reduce the friction for the sheethand while sheeting the new side on).
3 skipper must remember to not instantly heat the boat up out of the gybe too much or you can wipe out. dont stay too square out of the gybe but dont go too high and help out the sheet hand to fill the kite by steering the boat up a bit if he is having trouble filling it.
4. settle the boat down and hang on again.
"The Drop"
Leeward drop
1. grab either of the sheets and start pulling it into the boat
2. when you have the clew, the tack needs to be fired and you need to gather the kite along the foot quickly.
3. once you have the two corners in the bag, fire the halyard and pull it down and into the bag (the kite should stay under control behind the mainsails shadow)
4. tidy up and start hiking.
windward drop.
1. grab the lazy sheet taking up the slack and pull it in under the bottom spreaders and the lowers (if you have gooseneck stays go over the top of them)
2 when ready, start pulling the chute in by the windward sheet, when you get the clew close to the forestay fire the tack and gather the foot into the bag.
3 . fire the halyard trying to gather the kite from the middle between the two tapes so your pulling it down evenly instead of one side leaving the other tape to fill again and drag the kite out.
4. tidy up and start hiking.
tip. make sure your halyards are clear to run. i usually tidy them up by dropping the tail of the halyard down into the cabin first followed by the rest fed down. same with the tack. saves the rope trying to run out from underneath the coil and a birds nest happening.
the outside sheet thing. really not needed. the chutes are small enough to do inside gybes. plus you'll have about double the rope to pull round!
hope that helps a bit. works for me on all the sportsboats i sail on.