In plain or battle sail are the stays and jib normally taken down? The graphic seems to suggest it. The models always have them.
In plain or battle sail are the stays and jib normally taken down? The graphic seems to suggest it. The models always have them.
The headsails played an important roll in turning through the wind. Same with the spanker. However, most of the models have spritsails, and by this period it was a sail that was rarely used. Most period illustrations show the spritsail spar bare. To that end, I have removed the spritsails from my models and replaced them with a tiny bit of carbon fiber rod ( and added rod on the frigates that didn't have any and the British 1st rates).
So forgive my ignorance but the head sails are the jib and stay sails in the diagram? And they should remain up in fighting sail?
Yes, those are the headsails. It is my understanding that the typical fighting sail configuration was topsails, maybe t'gallants, and headsails and spanker. The idea was maximum maneuverability with minimum crew handling.
Nelson went for all sail (I think including stuns'ls) at Trafalgar to break the combined fleet's line as fast as possible in light air.
I have read Patrick O'Brian's books twice and I have only just learnt what "Broached" means.
Thanks Keith for your thread very helpful
I was stationed Belize an old British colony and could not drink rum the way the locals did "white local rum and condensed milk" :erk:
This is a fantastic guide! A ton of information I needed! I love the diagrams. So simple my kids will be able to learn about the ship sections and correct names!
Thank you all for sharing this. Excellent info.
Extraordinary job! keep up the good work