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With
the sails
now sewn up and fitted with bolt ropes all round, they are ready to be
attached
or bent to the yards.
To the less experienced model maker this may be
somewhat surprising at such an early stage, as the yards are, of
course, not yet attached to the
masts. However, if you have a little experience in period ship
modelling, you will know the reason: bending the sails to the yards is
much easier to carry out if the yard and the sail are lying on the
table before you, and you can turn them round and over to your heart's
content. On the other hand, if you have to do this job with the complex
ropework of the standing rigging and possibly even the running rigging
in your way, you will find it well-nigh impossible.At a later stage the
yards complete with sails are mounted on the
masts. which job is no more complicated than fitting the yards on their
own.
On model plans the bending of the sails is generally either not shown
at
all, or if it is shown, then in most cases the method is inaccurate. In
the
drawings on the right you will see the four standard methods:
1. Bending with a running lacing. This system was widely
distributed in the early Middle Ages, and in the Mediterranean area in
particular from there it was adopted initially for the lateen sails of
the late 14th century, and at the end of the I5th century for the
first, very small, topsails. Incidentally, large lateen sails were
never attached with a running lacing, but always with
separate robands.The running lacing disappeared completely from larger
ships
by the middle of the 16th century , but is still used to this day on
small
gaffed fishing vessels and coastal boats.
2. Bending the sails with robands. This was the usual
method from ancient
times onward, and was always much more widely distributed than the
running
lacing.This older system used short lengths of cordage tied to front
and
back of the sail; the rear end was then wound once round the yard, and
the
two ends tied together on the yard, just in front of the centre. This
Wab
the standard method until the beginning of the 17th century, after
which time
it remained in use in some areas of the Mediterranean, where it
lingered on
until the 19th century.
3. In central and Northern Europe the start of the 17th
century saw the introduction of a new method, by which several loops
were passed round the yard and the head rope and then through the
eyelets, before the robands were tied on the yard. There were two
versions, one for the large sails of the lower and topsail yards, and a
rather simpler one for the small sails of the topgallant and royal
yards.
4. When jackstays were introduced, in the first half of
the 19th century. the sails were bent to the jackstays with either rob
and hitches or a round turn and a reef knot.The earing cringles were
lashed to the yard arms to prevent
the sails pulling in towards the middle.The sail should be taut on the
yard,
without being stretched very tight; i.e. if you let it hang freely,
there
should be no folds. If the sail falls into vertical folds, then it is
too
loose, and the earings must be pulled somewhat tighter. If the sail
falls
into horizontal folds, it is too tight, and the earings must be
loosened a
little.
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