enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Spinnaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinnaker

    While a symmetric spinnaker is flown with a "guy" and a "sheet", an asymmetric spinnaker is flown with a tackline and a "sheet." The tack attaches to the bow or (often retractable) bowsprit, and the two sheets attach to the clew. The head of the sail is attached to the spinnaker halyard, which is used to raise the sail.

  3. Nexters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nexters

    Nexters is a video game company headquartered in Limassol, Cyprus.The company story dates back to 2010 when Andrey Fadeev and Boris Gertsovskiy met. The company is best known for its misleading ads for the mobile games Throne Rush and Hero Wars, [1] Nexters is one of the top five independent mobile game companies in Europe.

  4. Spinnaker (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinnaker_(disambiguation)

    A spinnaker is a type of sail. Spinnaker can also refer to: Spinnaker (software), an open-source continuous delivery platform; The Spinnaker (building), in Durban, South Africa; The Spinnaker, the official student newspaper of the University of North Florida; Spinnaker Tower, a building in Portsmouth, United Kingdom

  5. Genoa (sail) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genoa_(sail)

    A jib, left, compared to a roughly 110% genoa, right. The foretriangle is outlined in red. The term jib is the generic term for any of an assortment of headsails.The term genoa (or genny) refers to a type of jib that is larger than 100% of the foretriangle, which is the triangular area formed by the point at which the stay intersects the mast, and deck or bowsprit, and the line where the mast ...

  6. Screecher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screecher

    Its similarity with a spinnaker is that it is not attached to a stay along its luff, and typically has a slightly larger curvature than a genoa. Luff shape and tension is maintained by the halyard and a bolt rope which is woven into the sail itself, and it is this stiff tensioned rope which allows the sail to be furled on itself.

  7. Asymmetrical spinnaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetrical_spinnaker

    Since there is no spinnaker pole, there is no longer need for a pole topping lift or a pole downhaul. Like a jib, the asymmetric has two sheets and no "guy". The asymmetric is simpler to gybe than a conventional spinnaker since it only requires releasing a sheet and pulling in the other one, passing the sail in front of the forestay. An ...

  8. Guy (sailing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guy_(sailing)

    Because a spinnaker has two clews, there is always a second line identical to the afterguy attached to the leeward clew of the spinnaker. This is called the sheet and serves a slightly different function. When the boat jibes, the spinnaker pole will be moved from one side of the boat to the other, causing the sheet to become the guy and vice versa.

  9. Sheet (sailing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_(sailing)

    The jib sheet attaches to the clew of the jib, and controls it. The jib has a sheet on each side, only one of which (the leeward one) will be in use at one time. The spinnaker sheet attaches to the clew(s) of the spinnaker, if carried. A symmetrical spinnaker has two sheets, an "active" one and a "lazy" one, in the same way as a jib, but they ...