Spinnaker Set and Drop
The spinnaker is the sail that delivers the greatest speed advantage on the leeward leg – and at the same time the maneuver where most positions are lost. A clean set (hoist) and a controlled drop (douse) determine whether the crew builds pressure immediately after the windward mark or first has to clear chaos. In tight fleet-racing situations, every second counts: whoever has the spinnaker fully flying first often wins the overtaking maneuvers at the leeward gate.
This guide explains role allocation on board, proven set and drop sequences for symmetric and asymmetric spinnakers, the transition into the gybe drop, and typical sources of error. It complements the overview article Boat Handling and Crew Work and connects to Leeward Gates and Overlap, where spinnaker maneuvers become especially critical tactically.
Basics: When and Why the Spinnaker Flies
The spinnaker is a voluminous headsail for reaching courses. In regatta sailing, it is typically set as soon as the boat has rounded the windward mark and is sailing on a leeward course. The goal is maximum VMG (Velocity Made Good) toward the next mark – the spinnaker generates drive that the mainsail and jib alone can no longer deliver efficiently on deep angles.
What matters is not only the sail itself, but the coordination of the entire crew: while the pitman or mastman pulls the spinnaker from the bag and hoists it, trimmer, bowman, and helmsman must work in sync. A set that takes five seconds longer than the competition can make the difference between inside overlap at the gate and a cut-off layline on a short leeward leg.
Symmetric vs. Asymmetric Spinnaker
Crew Roles During the Spinnaker Set
Each position has a clearly defined task. Deviations lead to tangled sheets, hanging sails, or – in the worst case – a tack in the middle of the leeward leg.
Pitman and Mastman
The pitman (grinder/pit) coordinates the set from the cockpit. They give the commands, operate the sheet winch, and ensure the sheets run free. The mastman pulls the spinnaker from the bag or turtle, clips the head to the mast, and hoists the spinnaker. On smaller crews, one person takes both roles.
Bowman and Trimmer
The bowman prepares the set on deck: spinnaker head at the mast, sheets free, pole (if needed) ready. The spinnaker trimmer stands at the sheet winch or halyard and trims the sail immediately after the set. Good trimming does not start only when the sail is flying – the trimmer must lightly follow the sheet during the hoist so the spinnaker does not collapse on itself.
Helmsman and Tactician
The helmsman keeps course and boat speed stable during the set. Abrupt bearing away or sailing too slowly lets the spinnaker "sleep" behind the mainsail. The tactician decides on set timing, gybe plan, and gate choice – and communicates these decisions to the crew in good time.
The Spinnaker Set – Step by Step
A professional set follows a fixed sequence. Crews train this sequence as choreography until every step is automatic.
Preparation Before the Windward Mark
- Open spinnaker bag – bowman checks that sheets are not tangled
- Prepare head at mast – spinnaker head on mast hook or furling system
- Lead sheet free – sheet through blocks, no knots in the run
- Prepare pole (symmetric) – pole at mast, outrigger ready
- Communication – tactician announces gybe plan and gate choice
Set Sequence After the Mark Rounding
- "Hoist!" – mastman pulls spinnaker up, pitman assists on halyard
- Extend pole (symmetric) – bowman sets pole to desired side
- Set sheet – trimmer trims sheet until spinnaker unfolds
- "Made!" – confirmation that spinnaker is fully up
- Fine trim – trimmer optimizes sheet and tweaker for VMG
Wind and Course Requirements
A set is most reliable when:
- the boat is fully on a leeward course (not mid-tack)
- wind strength is stable (no gust during the hoist)
- the mainsail is eased and gives the spinnaker air
- the crew observes weight distribution – see Hiking and Trapeze
Warning: Setting during an incomplete mark rounding or with tangled sheets typically costs 3–8 places in the mid-fleet. Always check course and gear first, then call "Hoist".
The Spinnaker Drop – Controlled Douse
The drop is the maneuver in which the spinnaker is safely doused before the next windward mark or before a gybe. A poor drop means: sail in the water, tangled sheets, lost speed, and a stressed crew.
Standard Drop (Windward Approach)
- "Drop!" – pitman releases halyard, trimmer eases sheet at the same time
- Douse spinnaker – mastman/bowman pulls sail into bag or onto deck
- Retrieve pole (symmetric) – secure pole at mast
- Sort sheets – no loose ends in the cockpit
- Trim jib/mainsail – transition to upwind trim for the windward leg
Fast Drop (Emergency or Tight Gate Pressure)
Under heavy gate pressure or when the spinnaker "takes over" (wrap, overfill), a fast drop is executed:
- let halyard run fully immediately
- dump sheet completely
- stuff sail into bag, sort later
- priority: boat speed and control, not perfect order
Tip: Train the fast drop separately from the clean drop. In a regatta, control comes first – an unsorted bag is better than a spinnaker in the water.
Gybe Drop
During a gybe drop, the spinnaker is doused during or immediately after the gybe to start the new leeward leg with a fresh set – or to go through the turn without a spinnaker. The sequence is more demanding and requires close coordination with the roll gybe.
Typical gybe drop variants:
- Drop-before-gybe – douse spinnaker, then tack (safer, slower)
- Drop-during-gybe – douse spinnaker during the turn (faster, higher risk)
- Set-after-gybe – drop and immediate re-set on the new side (rare, for tactical situations)
Drop-before-gybe
Slow, safe – douse spinnaker first, then tack
Drop-during-gybe
Medium risk – douse during the turn
Set-after-gybe
Fast, risky – drop and immediate re-set on new side
Trim and VMG After the Set
After the set, the spinnaker trimmer is the most important person on board. They work closely with the helmsman to find the optimal VMG angle. Trimmed too tight, the spinnaker creates heel and braking pressure; too loose, the boat loses height toward the mark.
The trimmer watches luffing, overfill, and spinnaker curl and communicates constantly with the helm. For basics on working with mainsail and jib, see Mainsail and Headsail Trim.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Checklist: Spinnaker Set and Drop
Before the Race
- Spinnaker bag checked – sheets free, no tears
- Head and tack correctly attached at mast
- Pole and outrigger functional (symmetric)
- Set and drop sequence discussed with crew
- Gybe plan and gate choice communicated
Before the Windward Mark
- Bowman in position, bag open
- Sheet through all blocks, no knots
- Tactician announces gate and gybe plan
- Helmsman holds stable leeward course after rounding
During the Drop
- "Drop!" called clearly and once
- Halyard and sheet released simultaneously
- Sail fully in bag or on deck
- Transition to upwind trim without loss of time