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Moose
McClintock
Courtesy North Sails
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Well
it started out to be ten questions, but its hard to ask a guy like Mosse
just ten, so I think we doubled it, and even that isn't enough. Its not
what Moose has won, more like what he hasn't. He's won the J-24 Worlds
(five times), J-22 Worlds, Swan Worlds, too many NA titles to mention,
been involved with two America's Cup campaigns, you get the picture. A
native Newporter (RI, not Cali.), born and bred and still lives on the
island.He went to URI which was his initiation to high level sailing (and
drinking), graduated and went to work for Shore Sails in Newport. Moose
stayed there for 15 years, eventually running a company they set up called
Shore Cloth which was a takeoff on North Cloth. This was his first look
into all the different styles of cloth available to the sailmaking public
and he found it kind of interesting. After 15 years he figured it was
time to move on and went to work with Bainbridge Sailcloth, an excellent
company that had a change of direction after 5 years so he left with several
other co-workers and opened an office for Contender Sailcloth that was
closer to home. McClintock worked there for about 4 years when he tried
his hand at sailmaking again, working for North One Design. This was a
fantastic opportunity but the time constraints were difficult on his family
so he decided to get back into sailcloth when offered a job by Dimension/Polyant.
Moose truly loves selling cloth and talking about it with people.

Since
you are now again a man of the cloth (Dimension/Polyant), and a former
North guy, let's talk about sailcloth. In my opinion, it is mostly misunderstood
by a lot of people. What are some of the biggest misconceptions about
fabric?
MM
Actually,
I've been ordained in sailcloth the last ten years, first with Bainbridge
and then Contender before a year at North One Design, so I would guess
I have a pretty good overview of all the suppliers. I think you're correct,
most sailors misunderstand sailcloth unless they have a very good idea
about what they want out of their sails. One thing about sailcloth, and
I don't think it's a misconception so much as a wish, is whether it will
perform at a high performance level for a long time. There are a lot of
cruisers who want to be able to race competitively, and there are a lot
of racers who expect their sails to last a long time, but the requirements
for an inexpensive, durable cruising sail and an expensive, high performing
race sail are at opposite ends of the spectrum in construction and fiber.
I guess you'd say the biggest misconception is that there is a single
fabric that will service everyone's needs. There isn't, so talk to your
sailmaker, define exactly what you need and live with your choice. Secondly,
there is no perfect fiber for every application so you have to understand
what your sail is capable of doing and stay within its' performance parameters.
If there were a perfect fiber we'd all be using it so you've got to deal
with what you need and what you can afford. Expensive: Spectra for high-end
cruisers, Vectran for racer cruisers. Less Expensive: Carbon for top end
racing, aramids for generic racing. Least expensive: Pentex for the price
conscious racer cruiser, polyester for the cruiser, and of course combinations
of all of the above with each other: there are a lot of options, figure
out what you expect and go with it. Notice that every style has expensive
attached to it; sailcloth is not cheap to make or buy.

For
Sailcloth 101, explain the differences between a laminate and a woven
fabric, and their respective applications:
MM
Well,
they look different. But the biggest performance difference is strength
to weight, and for racing you obviously want the strongest, lightest fabric
you can, for a cruiser not so much since durability is more important.
Sailcloth is tested by how much it stretches at given loads. Laminates,
with formed scrims and straight, un-crimped high modulus yarns, stretch
far less for a given amount of fiber than a woven fabric with weave-induced
crimp. And of course as you use higher and higher modulus (resistance
to stretch) fibers the amount of fiber you need for the same strength
as a woven goes way down so the weight becomes even less. The high modulus
fibers we use in laminates don't weave well since most don't shrink in
the heat set process (where a woven polyester might shrink up 18%, making
the weave tighter and firming up the bias), that's why high modulus weaves
(like Kevlar or Spectra) are laminated to film.
The
other, and probably biggest, difference is how the scrim is formed compared
to cloth being woven. The nature of weaving is for the fill yarns to be
stronger and less crimped; in laminate scrims the warp is stronger and
less crimped. By building a tri-radial sail you can orient a very strong
fiber in directions that better address load (particularly in what would
be the bias, and weakest, direction of a woven). In a crosscut woven,
unless you do panel rotation, you only have a strong thread in one direction
so it really isn't anywhere as efficient for the weight.

Are
most of your laminates meant to be glued together as opposed to sewn?
MM
Either
way, really, though gluing is recommended. For minimum movement on the
seams, particularly in film on film styles, the glued seam is far better
since the stitching will comb through the film unless there is a taffeta
to slow it down.

If
you could point out the three biggest advancements in cloth in the last
5 years, what would they be?
MM
The
biggest advancement has probably been the introduction of Carbon as a
mainstream product. By backing away from the highest modulus Carbon yarns
suppliers can provide a very strong, pretty durable (depending on how
you make the cloth) product. Combining the carbon yarns with an aramid
or Technora base has resulted in much more durable fabric than 3-5 years
ago. Second biggest is the advances made in Cuben Fiber. Though still
prohibitively expensive, it is an excellent choice for very large applications
where shape holding and minimum weight (think mega cats) is critical.
The ability to construct the fabric is multidirectional axis is unique
and in the multi-layering needed for the heavier weights there isn't the
shrinkage you see in the lighter weights. The question is whether the
performance edge is worth the dollar investment: you have to get up there
in weight before you see benefits. Third is the advance in nylons: there
are more options for performance nylon over a wide range from all suppliers
than there has been in the last 20 years.
Now
that's the cloth end. The sail construction end has had lots of advancements
but you should talk to a sailmaker about that.

It
is my opinion that the North 3 DL product forced sail fabric manufactures
to build a better product. Agree or disagree and why?
MM
North
has upped the game, there's no doubt about that, and the cloth suppliers
followed the market as sailmakers asked them to get lighter and stronger.
This really meant just small changes in what was going into the fabrics,
the fibers didn't really change that much and lamination is the same.
Films and fibers were tried and discarded and we're almost back to where
we started with some minor changes. If you look at 3DL, it's essentially
the same too, just different glues and yarn paths and different processing.
More
than anything, 3DL is a different process to get to basically the same
shape other sailmakers are looking for. Their process is being copied
(and may have been a copy itself, but that's another issue) by other sailmakers
in various forms and the issue now is whether the different sailmaking
systems have an identifiable "proprietary" means of construction
to woo the customers. The initial response to 3DL was to build very light,
very load oriented, unidirectional fabrics. What we're seeing now is that
customers are more interested in a durable product so there is more yarn
being put into off angle directions, closing the windows of open film
(which accelerate shrinkage) and making a sail that will not be throw
away. The Grand Prix market is going away and many PHRF guys feel that
a durable, dual-purpose product is the way to go.

Spinnaker
cloth has seen the Nylon-Polyester-Nylon evolution. Where is it today?
MM
The America One daze.............
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Nylon
has actually been one of the bigger areas of development in the sailcloth
business over the last 5-7 years. This coincides with the growing use
of windward leeward courses, the decline in point to point and distance
sailing and the tendency of most sailing going the route of weeknight
beer can stuff. It used to be that everyone had an AP .75 and a 1.5, even
on boats as small as 35', and .5 oz. kites were a rarity. Without reaching
around in lead-mines, the need for 1.5 has virtually disappeared in racing
for boats under 50'. In lighter evening breezes, .5 oz kites are more
and more necessary, and in leftover chop from breeze earlier in the day
it's even more crucial for stability. More .5 and .6 nylon is being sold
in the racing market than anything else, with .75 and 1.5 almost strictly
cruise unless the .75 is being used in one design where there's a minimum
weight.
Of
course, this scenario is a worst case for polyester unless the sail is
older and more stable. The good points of poly are non-stretch and non-water
absorption so it has a good application in powered up, windy conditions.
However, if in those conditions you get shock loading (like burying the
bow) the chute won't be forgiving and will occasionally explode. In light
air it's so unstable from the non-elasticity that it's basically useless.
One of my first experiences with it was on a J-24 where we were blazing
downwind in the first race of a night series while the sea breeze was
blowing, and parked the next race when the wind had died but the chop
was still there. So on the whole, nylon is coming on pretty strong with
advances in construction, better availability of 20 denier nylon (critical
for properly woven .5 and .6) and better coating techniques. Polyester
remains for some specific applications but is losing popularity for the
most part. However, some pockets of the country still think it's a really
good product.

What
are the current asymmetric spinnaker materials available, and their applications?
MM
Any
nylon out there is fine for Asso's. There are several silicon-coated styles
that, ideally, increase speed in hoists, jibing and shedding water. Many
sailmakers dislike using it because it is hard to construct (the search
is still on for the perfect tape to use while sticking it together) but
if you don't mind paying a slight premium for construction add-on it should
be better. Many sailmakers are using .5 or .75 and spraying them with
McLube, it achieves the same result and it's an after construction thing
that doesn't impede the production line. There is some polyester going
into Asso's, mostly high speed applications (cats) where the apparent
builds up and the stretch has to be minimal, but there is a durability
issue that cuts down on it's overall use. On the AC boats in '00 this
wasn't really even a thought, we used off the shelf .5 and .75 and it
was fine. I might add that in '95 we used almost all polyester and the
Asso's weren't particularly fast till they had a lot of use on them.

Let's
say I just bought a T870 - a boat with a big main, non-overlapping jib,
and huge asso kites. I want a light and strong inventory of an inshore
main, 2 jibs and two kites. What would you recommend?
MM
If
you want performance just go with a carbon main and jib, the main has
full battens so the impacting and flex problems are minimal, you can be
really light for a lot of strength and you'll be pleasantly surprised
at the durability. The heavy jib would probably be the same weight, since
it doesn't hit the rig (impacting under load is the biggest source of
breakdown in any laminate, in Carbon maybe more so) it should last quite
a while. You could go pretty light on a light jib, you can get to 2.5
oz. pretty easily for the under 8 knot range. As a side note, Tim Woodhouse
of Hood Sails did a carbon inventory for his T35 last year and sailed
the boat a lot, lots of weeknight racing every week, distance races, everything.
At the end of the season the shape was almost exactly the same as when
new, zero breakdown in the fiber, no breaks. For chutes you would use
½ oz for both if you're strictly doing inshore racing, if you were
expecting to do point to point you would have to decide on how heavy you'd
want to go for a VMG that would double as a heavy runner. For the speed
of that boat I think a 30/20 would probably be fine, there's more load
on it in VMG conditions when high angles generate more apparent wind and
it would deal up to 25 knots no problem as a heavy runner when the apparent
wind would only be about 10 knots.

Give
us the straight dope on Carbon - is it worth the price premium, and how
much of a premium are we talking?
MM
Carbon
is terrible as dope: you can't light it so you can't smoke it. Carbon
is really pretty good for sails though
.far better than I thought
it would be when I saw it in the '95 AC. The carbon in those sails broke
quite easily and I thought it wasn't really a long-term product. However,
in the '00 AC I saw hardly any breakage and I was frankly quite surprised
that there was as much improvement as there was. The biggest difference
is the modulus of the fiber being used and the methods used in building
the cloth. The high modulus carbon yarn was just too brittle, this was
what went into most of the early carbon sails and led to failure. The
yarn was also being used in a preformed scrim. The scrim is quite firm
and tends to flex at the same point when a crease occurs, this hinge point
breaks down rapidly. The medium modulus we use is in fairly big bundles
and are not pre-pregged so they flex more without breaking down. Although
not as strong as the highest modulus carbon, it is still about 50% stronger
than Kevlar and doesn't lose anything through UV exposure. The irritating
thing about Kevlar is it needs to be built about 30-40% heavier in total
yarn count because it degrades so fast through the combination of flex
and UV. With Carbon there is zero UV loss and loss of strength through
flex is not as much as you would think.

Joe
PHRF has a masthead WingNut 35 and needs an AP 155% genoa. He doesn't
want to spend a fortune, but he wants a good racing sail. What do you
recommend?
MM
I thought
the WingNut 35 was one design. Well this is PHRF so Kevlar is still a
good, proven product. Overbuild it just a bit to make sure it's strong
enough to cover the upper range of its' application. The biggest problem
with new sails is getting carried over its' limit and getting permanently
distorted. Obviously, a good part of this is impact in the rig but the
unseen damage is in the luff: the halyard is tensioned to the proper load
for straight line loading, when you tack and the load is taken off the
headstay the halyard transfers all the load to the luff of the sail which
is generally built lighter than the rest of the sail. The constant load
and unload of the film breaks it down rapidly leading to the fine entry
everyone sees in laminate sails. A perfect example of this was a genoa
we used in the '95 AC: the wind picked up over the sail's designed range
right off the line and had to be tensioned more than the yarn load would
handle, we then had a 20 tack duel up the beat. The sail was completely
spent in 25 minutes.

How
is the market - are people still buying sails?
MM
It's
a little slow
I think wars tend to do that. However, the market
in sailmaking is much like boat building, there are rich people doing
big boats and they need big sails. The people who have had their boats
for a long time and realize they're not going to move onto another boat
are upgrading their sails and that is a pretty constant. Cruisers make
up the majority of the boats on the water but they only get sails as they
wear out which is generally 6-10 years so that is constant though not
as frequent. The slow area is the mid-range sailor who is wondering if
his .com is going bust and if not if he should move up to a new boat
it's
all indecision. One sailmaker told me the business is there, it's just
taking an incredibly long tome to get people to close deals.

Are
there any cloth advances of note for smaller One Design boats - J-24's,
Stars, etc?
MM
Cloth
advances in one design, where the fabrics are usually woven polyester,
are smaller and less earth-shaking. There was an effort in the last two
years to introduce a new yarn into the market that did not meet its' expectations,
it's still hard to top Dacron. The quest here is for a more durable fabric,
either through weaving with various rip-stops to cut down on cloth degradation,
and in finishes that will hold the shape longer. Polyester (Dacron) hasn't
changed much in the last 45 years so you don't see big changes in the
end result, there are some newer fibers that have been introduced but
they are both good and bad as far as how they affect the cloth in the
long run. One of the worst things that has happened is the discontinuation
of many yarns that were used to make excellent sailcloth. It's not like
DuPont is going to keep carrying expensive fibers for a small market like
sailing (small in relation to all the woven stuff that goes on in the
world). So when people say "why can't they make cloth like they used
to" it's mostly because the fiber's not there.

I think
a big concern for a lot of sailors is the ultimate cost of sails. With
improvements in material and manufacturing, tell us how cloth will factor
into sail cost for the future.
MM
Improvements
don't necessarily mean cheaper. Hopefully, the improvements mean the end
user doesn't have to buy as many sails over the long run because they'll
be more durable. The different sail molding processes that are being developed
right now should mean less cost since there is less raw goods going into
the sails but the expense of developing the process has to be amortized
into the cost of the sail (and as soon as that gets taken care of they'll
upgrade to the next level and start the chain all over again).

What
can people look to in the future of sailcloth, both in terms of product
and price?
MM
Sailors
are always looking for the next "big" thing. As I said earlier,
if there was a perfect fiber we'd all use it and there would be little
debate. There are 1 or 2 new fibers that are in development that may prove
to have substantial performance advantages: what their cost will be and
whether they work is still to be seen (see PBO). Right now that perfect
fiber isn't available so I think you'll see more and more carbon coming
into play since it's fairly new in its' acceptance and offers a performance
upgrade. It will be a little more expensive but it's all relative, everything
costs more if you're upgrading, from boats to electronics (to BMW's) and
so forth. Kevlar will remain but I think you'll see it become more of
a commodity product rather than the elite product, used mainly for the
guy who can't afford the step up to Carbon (much like where Pentex vs.
Kevlar is now). The price of sailcloth is really determined by the price
of the raw goods, as those costs go up the overall cost goes up geometrically
with it. Cloth suppliers are working hard to hold down the price to help
the sailmaker but there will always be a steady climb in cost, that's
the nature of the business. In the near future you'll probably see more
sailmakers trying to build some sort of molded sail and the suppliers
will help however they can though it's not necessarily in their best interest.
And woven polyesters will always be there as the good, inexpensive way
to get out on the water.

We've
stuck to sail cloth so far, but let's turn to actual sailing. Was there
a regatta on a certain J-22 that involved a crew member, an owner and
a swim?
MM

From the 2001 J-80 Worlds.
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Of
course, this comes from Steve Hammerman who I've had the pleasure of sailing
with in a couple J-80 regattas. Wally was our trimmer and was a diligent,
hard working part of the team. We had a couple disagreements on trim and
tactics but overall he worked as hard to make us win as anyone on the
boat, I'll leave it at that. As for doing the J-World jump, it's SOP in
Newport because of all the pots (the move is so named because the J-World
guys are always getting stuck on them) and after Steve whiffed on the
leeward mark rounding (and with a "what the f**k do I do now"
look on his face) I took a dive for the team: however, as anyone who's
sailed with me knows, swimming is not my forte, I certainly didn't let
go of the boat.

You've
been a part of a lot of varied winning programs. What have been some commonalities
they have?
MM
First
and foremost, every winning program had a really good driver (Kenny Read,
Vince Brun, Terry Hutchinson, Paul Cayard, Peter Isler, Chris Larson),
someone who could do what I asked of them (if I was a tactician) or could
over rule me and be right. They generally drive you to do a good job but
in a pleasant way, for the most part. I don't mind having the guy driving
tell me I'm wrong, I know they're a better sailor or we wouldn't be there
in the first place. Second, we always have a good crew. There are a lot
of good guys out there who never crack the top because they just can't
get over the hump
a good crew cannot be measured enough. Third,
I sail with my friends. I always have people asking me to sail but for
the most part, I'd rather hang with my buddies, we all get better together.
I often sail as an accessory in other programs with people I don't know
that well but it's not as much fun.

Define
some of the qualities that have made you an accomplished sailor.
MM
On
the boat I'm a team player. I usually get to the boat early and help rig
everything up, I generally take criticism well, though not always (I did
crack a couple times in the last Cup, you can only take so much mental
abuse), so that the driver can blow me shit if he wants and I can mostly
deal with it. A constant whine will eventually get to me but for the most
part I try to put my head down and forge ahead. I did a lot of match racing
with Dave Perry and Peter Isler, this has helped a lot in boat on boat
situations so I think this helps me a lot in different one on one cases,
anticipating situations and having escapes. I'm finesse oriented on the
boat so I stress boat handling as a way to gain places
.bad crew
work drives me right through the roof. I don't criticize during a race
(though I whine a little
.I'm human) and try to look objectively
at everything at the end of the day. Mostly I try to learn something every
day I'm on the water. The day you're not learning is the day to take up
golf (which I'm also flailing at).

Has
there been one win that stands out above all others? And why?
MM
The
first time I won the J-24 Worlds, in Annapolis in '92, was pretty special.
It was something I'd worked toward for a long time (though I'm sure for
Kenny it was old hat by then) and that was an impressive fleet (over 90
boats, any of the top 15 could have won). We didn't have to sail the last
day. It was pretty cool.

Of
all the classes you've competed in, what is the toughest?
MM
I used
to think it was the J-24, certainly the competition in the class through
the '80's and early '90's was as good as it gets, and Solings were very
tough on a world basis, certainly our trials in '84 were abut as hard
as anyting I've sailed. The IOR 50 class was really tough but since the
boats weren't one design they weren't even. Looking at it, I'd have to
say the Farr 40 class is the toughest, one design and very close, every
race counts in a big way.

If
you were buying a boat for yourself, what would it be?
MM
Well,
I sail my Laser as much as I can and I'd like to have a new one. I think
the Laser is the best boat ever designed, it rewards you mightily if you
do it right and punishes you if you do it wrong, it's a great workout,
it's one design and it's almost always incredibly tight sailing. But since
I already have one I think I'd like something like a Nonsuch 36, not too
big, easy to sail, lots of room, perfect for my wife and daughter to do
a quick overnight. I don't need to go upwind real fast.

Thanks
Moose!
MM
NFP!
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