An asymmetrical spinnaker (A-sail) delivers most of the performance and all of the beauty of a regular spinnaker with a fraction of the effort.
This is what you need to fly an a-sail from your Mac:
An a-sail
A tack line; about ten inches of line shackled to the forestay base
Sheets twice your boat’s length, about 100 feet total
A pair of turn blocks for sheets
Your existing jib halyard and pulley will work fine, but a swiveling pulley is a bit better
This is what you need to rig a spinnaker:
A spinnaker
A pair of turn blocks for sheets
A pair of turn blocks for guys
A downhaul with a turn block at the bow and fair leads to the cockpit
A topping lift
A spinnaker pole
A pair of sheets
A pair of guys (not men, lines used to control the pole side of the spinnaker. Guy lines are fun primarily for the rude humor possibilities they inspire, especially if you have a crewman named Guy)
A mast track or pad eye for the pole
Halyard
An extra crew person to fly the sail
Food and drink for extra crew
My latest Youtube video, Meet My Boat 3, shows how to rig, fly, raise and lower an a-sail on my 1998x. With some practice, it’s easy to fly the sail single handed and it moves the boat very well in light air.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3OxykDlvc1M
Of course, this post could be seen as just another shameless attempt to promote my Youtube video…