Talk:Staysail

Latest comment: 14 years ago by Outofthewoods in topic help!

Comments edit

This seems all wrong to me... at least, it may well be right in terms of common usage, but the actual definitions I learned and sailed by for years were:

A jib is a triangular sail that runs up a stay, typically the forestay on a small boat.

A staysail has its own stay built in, so the foot will be attached (eg to a point on the bowsprit or foredeck) and the head hoisted, without the benefit of an existing line.

Otherwise, they are equivalent sails; though, by implication, only a jib can be 'hanked on'!

help! edit

A diagram would give me some idea of what is being talked about. I'm sorry and i'm not at all being rude when i say that, as a land lubber, after reading this article i was left no wiser than before. This has happened to me now on many sailing articles i have accessed and i always come to the same conclusion that a few well placed diagrams and drawings would do the trick. After all, most of us have seen pictures and films showing various sailing craft, we just don't know a lot of the actual terminology. Diagrams would just complete the picture!

Thanks for listening and love to all fellow Wikipedians —Preceding unsigned comment added by Outofthewoods (talkcontribs) 03:16, 23 June 2009 (UTC)Reply