Sail Types and Applications

The right sail choice often decides seconds per leg in racing sailing – sometimes entire positions. Not every sail suits every wind angle, boat class and course profile. Those who classify sail types systematically by function, wind range and manoeuvre requirements make better decisions when buying, rigging and in the tactical briefing before the start. This guide categorises all relevant racing sail types and shows when each sail plays to its strengths on the course.

Classifying sail types by wind angle

Racing sails are most reliably classified by wind angle and leg phase. The basic distinction from racing terminology – upwind and reaching – forms the backbone of every sail decision.

  1. Upwind (approx. 35°–60° to apparent wind): Mainsail and headsail deliver VMG and boat balance
  2. Reaching (approx. 60°–120°): Flatter headsails, gennaker or Code Zero take over
  3. Downwind (approx. 120°–180°): Spinnaker, flasher or maximum sail area with twist
  4. Heavy-air reduction: Reefed sails, storm trysail and reduced headsails replace full area

Sail selection by leg phase

1
Course briefing
2
Check wind range
3
Choose sail type
4
Adjust rig tuning
5
Plan manoeuvres

Typical windward-leeward courses switch between these phases several times per race. A well-thought-out sail inventory therefore covers not only ideal weather but also transitions between angles.

Main sails: mainsail and headsail

Mainsail and headsail form the structural foundation of every racing setup. They are used on almost every leg and largely determine helm load, heel and manoeuvrability. Details on fine trim can be found under mainsail and headsail trim.

Mainsail

The mainsail sits on the mast and is shaped via outhaul, Cunningham, backstay and mast bend. In one-design classes, luff length, roach, batten count and material are often fixed by class rules – deviations lead to measurement protests.

  1. Standard mainsail: All-round sail for the majority of a regatta's wind range
  2. Light-air mainsail: More roach, lighter membrane, flatter furling profiles – useful when maximising sail area
  3. Heavy-air mainsail: Flatter profile, reinforced corners, optimised reef system for depower and reducing sail
  4. Furling mainsail vs. classic mainsail: In dinghies and small keelboats the roller rig dominates; on larger boats often stack pack or lazy jacks

Important: Mainsail shape and mast bend are inseparably linked. When buying a new mainsail, you should have mast bend and rig tuning checked at the same time.

Headsails: jib, genoa and class variants

Headsails deliver upwind power and control flow over the mainsail. The choice depends on LP ratio (luff perpendicular), cloth weight and intended wind range.

  • Jib (100% LP or smaller): Standard in most one-design dinghies and many keelboat classes
  • Genoa (over 100% LP): More area for light air and cruising racers; often not permitted in racing classes
  • Heavy jib / storm jib: Smaller, reinforced headsail for strong winds and rough seas
  • Flattener / No. 3: Flat headsail for medium to strong wind upwind
  • Code Zero (see below): Border area between headsail and downwind sail

In Olympic two-person boats such as 420 or 470, several headsail sizes are common – the crew chooses before the start based on the forecast wind range.

Special sails for reaching and downwind

As soon as the course shifts from upwind to reaching or running, special sails decide speed and handling. Crew coordination and setup are just as important as the sail shape itself.

Symmetric spinnaker

The classic symmetric spinnaker is flown on the spinnaker pole and suits reaching to running. It delivers maximum projected area but requires an experienced crew for gybes and drops.

  1. Application range: approx. 90°–180° apparent wind
  2. Strengths: High downwind speed in stable wind conditions
  3. Weaknesses: Demanding handling, prone to wraps and instability in gusts
  4. Typical classes: 470, 505, Dragon, many IRC/ORC racers

Manoeuvre details: spinnaker set and drop

Asymmetric spinnaker (gennaker)

The gennaker has a larger leading edge and smaller trailing edge. It is flown from the bow without a pole and covers a wider angle range than the symmetric spinnaker.

  1. Application range: approx. 70°–155° apparent wind
  2. Strengths: Easier handling, quick sets by keelboat crews
  3. Weaknesses: Less area close to the wind than Code Zero or sym spinnaker
  4. Typical classes: J/70, Melges 24, club racers with single-handed option

In-depth handling and trim: gennaker and Code Zero

Code Zero and flasher

The Code Zero is a flat, high-load headsail for light-air reaching and early downwind phases. Flashers or A2/A3 categories among asymmetric spinnakers distinguish flat reaching from deep running sails.

Sail type
Wind angle (apparent)
Typical wind strength
Handling effort
Primary use
Mainsail + jib
35°–60°
3–25 kn
Low
Upwind legs, start, mark roundings
Code Zero
55°–95°
4–14 kn
Medium
Light-air reaching, early downwind phases
Gennaker (A1/A2)
70°–140°
6–20 kn
Medium
Reaching to medium running
Symmetric spinnaker
90°–180°
8–25 kn
High
Reaching and running on W/L courses
Storm jib / trysail
35°–60°
25+ kn
Medium
Heavy-air depower, safety sails offshore

Close to upwind

  • Code Zero
  • Flat headsail

Reaching

  • Gennaker A1/A2
  • Code Zero

Running

  • Sym spinnaker
  • Gennaker A3

Storm and reef sails

In marginal weather or long offshore legs, reduced sails come into play. They keep boat and crew safe when full area is no longer controllable.

  1. Reef 1 / 2 / 3 in the mainsail: Step-by-step area reduction without a sail change – standard in almost all racing classes
  2. Storm trysail: Separate, reinforced mainsail replacement with reduced area and flat profile
  3. Storm jib: Small, high-load headsail; often required at certain wind strengths
  4. Heavy-air spinnaker: Reinforced asymmetric or symmetric spinnaker for controlled running in strong wind

Changing sails as wind increases costs time and can be tactically disadvantageous. Crews with a clear wind limit per sail type react earlier and more controllably than teams that rely on maximum area for too long.

Sail selection by boat class and rules

Not every boat class permits every sail type. The distinction between one-design vs. handicap systems largely shapes the permitted sail inventory.

One-design classes

In Olympic and one-design fleets, class rules specify exactly:

  • Number and type of permitted sails per regatta
  • Material, batten count, measurement points and sailmaker approval
  • Whether multiple headsails or spinnakers are permitted

Example ILCA: One mainsail per event, material and cut defined by class rules – see rigging and sail selection ILCA.

IRC and ORC racers

On handicap boats there is more freedom. Teams develop sails specifically for their own rating and typical regatta conditions of the season. Multiple spinnaker and headsail sizes are common – the choice depends on weather routing and course profile.

Sail inventory by boat type

Dinghy

  • Main + jib
  • optional spinnaker

One-design keelboat

  • Main + 2–3 jibs
  • Gennaker + sym spinnaker

Handicap racer

  • Main + multiple jibs
  • Code Zero + A suite + sym spinnaker

Practical sail selection before the start

The best sail decision comes from weather, course profile and crew strength – not from habit.

  1. Evaluate weather briefing: Wind range, gusts, shifts and sea state determine the sail combination
  2. Analyse course profile: Short W/L courses with many manoeuvres favour simpler downwind sails
  3. Assess crew capacity honestly: Symmetric spinnaker only pays off if sets and drops are solid
  4. Check material condition: A worn laminate mainsail loses against fresh Dacron in medium winds
  5. Check rules: Class rules and sailing instructions can restrict sail changes or certain types

Checklist: sail selection before the first signal

  • Class rules read
  • Wind range matched with weather forecast
  • All sails checked at measurement points
  • Rig tuning matched to chosen mainsail
  • Downwind sails laid out for expected leg angles
  • Crew roles for sets discussed
  • Spare headsail ready for marginal weather
  • Sail numbers and marking checked

Tip: Professional teams document per leg which sail was trimmed how. Amateurs also benefit from short notes after training days – so sail selection becomes data-driven rather than intuitive over the season.

Common mistakes in sail type assignment

  1. Setting Code Zero too close to the wind: Overloads rigging and costs VMG – switch to jib earlier
  2. Gennaker in too much wind: Instability and broaches endanger position and equipment
  3. Headsail too flat in light air: Missing power upwind costs more than an extra manoeuvre
  4. Spinnaker without clear drop strategy: At marks and sudden wind shifts, wraps and time loss threaten
  5. Sail without rig adjustment: New sail with old mast setup does not use its potential

Frequently asked questions

  • When is a Code Zero worth it instead of a large gennaker? – In light-air reaching and narrower angles below 90°
  • Do I need multiple headsails as a club sailor? – Often no in one-design; yes with variable wind strength
  • Symmetric or asymmetric? – Depends on class, crew and typical courses
  • How long does a racing laminate last? – UV and usage decide; pro sails often one season, amateurs 2–4 years
  • Can sailmakers be chosen freely? – Only if class rules allow; otherwise use approved sailmakers

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Last updated: 4 July 2026