- The lug sail, or
lugsail, is a fore-and-aft, four-cornered sail that is
suspended from a spar,
called a yard. When raised, the sail area
overlaps the...
- double-ended,
usually with a
single mast
setting a
large loose-footed
dipping lugsail, and
frequently manned by Chinese.
These latter boats still survive, but...
-
Tanja sail (also
known as
canted square/rectangular sail,
balance lugsail, or
boomed lugsail)
features a four-sided sail with
spars on both the foot and the...
-
misleadingly as the
canted square sail,
canted rectangular sail,
boomed lugsail, or
balance lugsail).
Tanja sails were
rigged similarly to crab claw
sails and also...
- punt, a square-sterned,
lapstrake open-boat
rigged with a
single dipping lugsail, used for
salvage and
rescue work off a beach. In
coastal communities,...
-
cutters to use a
removable mizzen mast for use when reaching,
setting a
lugsail.
Since the boom of the
mainsail overhung the stern, the mast
would have...
-
misleadingly as the
canted square sail,
canted rectangular sail,
boomed lugsail, or
balance lugsail).
Tanja sails were
rigged similarly to crab claw
sails and also...
- one mast, each with a crow's nest, and a
triangular sail
resembling a
lugsail. The rigging, with its stays, shrouds,
sheets and tacks, braces, lifts...
- The junk rig, also
known as the
Chinese lugsail,
Chinese balanced lug sail, or
sampan rig, is a type of sail rig in
which rigid members,
called battens...
- used for
pearling in Australia,
which were
often ship's boats, and used a
lugsail, and so they were
called luggers. But as
boats began to be
designed specifically...