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gennaker

A gennaker is a type of downwind sail used on sailing yachts. The term, often spelled gennaker or genaker, denotes a sail that blends characteristics of a gennaker and a spinnaker (or of a genoa and a spinnaker). It is designed to improve performance on broad reaches and downwind courses while being easier to handle than a full symmetric spinnaker for many crews.

Design and construction: A gennaker is typically an asymmetrical sail with a curved luff, cut to balance

Usage and handling: Gennakers are popular on cruising and racing yachts for improving downwind speed and acceleration

Variants and context: The gennaker fills a niche between a genoa and a spinnaker, offering greater drive

power
and
stability
at
downwind
angles.
It
is
usually
flown
from
a
bowsprit
or
a
dedicated
sprit
and
flown
using
a
halyard
and
two
sheets
(one
on
each
side)
for
trimming,
sometimes
with
an
additional
tack
line.
Materials
are
commonly
lightweight
nylon
or
laminated
fabrics.
The
sail’s
shape
allows
it
to
hold
form
without
the
heavy
rigging
required
by
a
large
symmetric
spinnaker.
without
the
complexity
of
a
large
double‑sheeted
spinnaker
rig.
They
are
deployed
by
hoisting
the
sail
on
its
halyard,
attaching
the
tack
to
the
sprit
or
bowsprit,
and
trimming
with
the
two
sheets.
They
can
be
reefed
or
replaced
with
other
downwind
sails
such
as
a
code
zero
or
a
full
spinnaker
depending
on
wind
strength
and
course.
than
a
jib
on
broad
reaches
while
remaining
more
manageable
than
a
large
spinnaker.
It
is
one
of
several
specialized
downwind
sails
used
to
optimize
performance
at
various
wind
angles.