Jib

 195,00

Sail Area: 13.5m2
Luff: 9m
Foot: 3.5m
Leech: 8m

 175,00

Sail Area: 15m2
Luff: 9.4m
Foot: 3.6m
Leech: 8.4m

 175,00

Sail Area: 17m2
Luff: 8.6m
Foot: 4.15m
Leech: 8.5m

Original price was: € 4.138,00.Current price is: € 2.400,00.

Sail Area: 20.7m2
Luff: 11.21m
Foot: 3.95m
Leech: 10.41m

 695,00

Sail Area: 19m2
Luff: 10.1m
Foot: 4.4m
Leech: 8.7m

 695,00

Sail Area: 12m2
Luff: 8.2m
Foot: 3.8m
Leech: 6.65m

 695,00

Sail Area: 6.4m2
Luff: 7.03m
Foot: 2.14m
Leech: 6.2m

 195,00

Sail Area: 5.6m2
Luff: 4.8m
Foot: 2.4m
Leech: 4.9m

 195,00

Sail Area: 5.6m2
Luff: 4.8m
Foot: 2.4m
Leech: 4.9m

 595,00

Sail Area: 6.3m2
Luff: 6.53m
Foot: 2.05m
Leech: 6.15m

 295,00

Sail Area: 11.5m2
Luff: 6.36m
Foot: 4.78m
Leech: 4.85m

 695,00

Sail Area: 9.5m2
Luff: 6.01m
Foot: 3.34m
Leech: 5.9m

Definition and key measurements

The jib fills the foretriangle forward of the mast without crossing the mast centerline.

Standard dimensions:

I = forestay height (deck to hounds)

J = foretriangle base (mast to stem)

LP = perpendicular distance from luff to clew (≤ 100 %)

Area = (I × J × LP%) ÷ 2

Luff type: wire, rope or foil

Jib categories

Working jib

LP 90–100 %

Versatile all-round sail for 10–20 kn

Cross-cut Dacron 6.5–8 oz

Hanks or furling foil

Moderate draft for balanced helm

Blade jib

LP 70–90 %

Flat cut for 20–30 kn and choppy water

Tri-radial laminate or 8–9 oz Dacron

Reduces heel and weather helm on fin-keel boats

Standard on performance cruisers 35–45 ft

Heavy-weather jib

LP 85–95 %

Built for 25–35 kn; replaces partially furled genoa

9–10 oz Dacron or hydranet radial

Foam luff pad for shape when reefed

Hanked on inner forestay or roller-reefed

Storm jib

LP < 40 %; high-visibility orange

9–11 oz Dacron, triple-stitched

Hanked on removable inner stay; never furled

Required for World Sailing OSR Category 0/1

Area ≈ 5–7 % of rated mainsail

Selection criteria

  1. Measure I and J from rig plan or tape.
  2. Match LP to wind range:
    • Coastal cruising → 95 % working jib
    • Offshore passage → 85 % blade + storm jib
    • Club racing → 70 % blade + #3
  3. Crew preference: hanks for reliability, furling for convenience.
  4. Cloth weight: increase 1 oz per 10 ft LOA above 30 ft.

Maintenance protocol

  • Rinse with fresh water after every sail.
  • Flake zigzag; avoid hard creases on battens.
  • UV strip facing sun when furled.
  • Inspect hanks, telltales and seam chafe monthly.
  • Replace UV strip every 4 years.

End-of-life upcycling

When stretch exceeds 15 % or UV damage penetrates the resin, retire the jib. Resail harvests panels for:

  • 25 L day-sail backpacks with original hanks
  • Padded winch handle sleeves
  • Waterproof chart cases (8,000 mm HH)
  • Reversible cockpit cushions

Procurement and upcycling

Send I and J measurements to info@resail.org for a matched second-hand jib or to schedule free collection of your retired sail. Every exchange keeps 8 m² of performance cloth in circulation.