Dictionary Definition
sloop n : a sailing vessel with a single mast set
about one third of the boat's length aft of the bow
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From sloep, from slœpen.Noun
- A single-masted sailboat with only one jib.
- Year?, Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, The Interesting
Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano,
- I stayed in this island for a few days; I believe it could not be above a fortnight; when I and some few more slaves, that were not saleable amongst the rest, from very much fretting, were shipped off in a sloop for North America.
- Year?, Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, The Interesting
Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano,
- A sailing warship, smaller than a frigate, with its guns all on one deck.
- a sloop of war, smaller than a frigate, larger than a corvette
Translations
checktrans-top ]]- [[Catalan: balandra
- Danish: slup
- Dutch: sloep
- German: Schaluppe ; Slup
- Icelandic: slúppa
- Italian: corvetta
- Japanese: スループ (surūpu)
- Norwegian: slupp
- Plattdeutsch: Schlup
- Serbian: слуп (slup)
- Spanish: balandra , chalupa
- Swedish: slup
- Ukrainian: шлюп (šlǔp)
- Vietnamese: thuyền nhỏ một buồm; tàu tuần tra
Dutch
Noun
nl-noun slopen / orVerb
sloopExtensive Definition
- For the military definition of sloop see: Sloop-of-war.
- For the open learning project see: SLOOP Project.
A sloop (from Dutch
sloep) is a sailboat
with a fore-and-aft
rig and a single mast
farther forward than the mast of a cutter. A
sloop's fore-triangle is smaller than a cutter's, and a sloop
usually bends only one headsail, though this
distinction is not definitive. Unlike cutters, sloops usually have
only one headsail, though some sloops such as the Friendship
Sloop have more than one. Ultimately position of the mast is
the most important factor.
On a gaff rigged, single masted boat, the
clearest distinction between a sloop and a cutter is
the run of the forestay. On the sloop, it runs
to the outboard end of the bowsprit, which means that spar
must always stay in position and cannot be retracted. On the
cutter, the forestay runs to the stem head of the hull. This allows
the bowsprit to be run back inboard and stowed. This can be helpful
in crowded harbours or when stowing the jib in strong wind
conditions.
Rationale behind the sloop rig
No design is perfect for all conditions; sloops
are designed to optimize upwind sailing. However, sloops also offer
an excellent overall compromise acceptable, if not optimal, to all
points of sail. It is clear that the most difficult direction to
sail is to the windward (known as sailing close-hauled);
this requires some specific design features. The sail should be as
vertical as possible to optimize the energy of the wind.
Two forces act on a vessel to push it from
vertical (also known as heeling over): (1) the weight of the rig
itself will tend to heel the boat, and (2) the sideways force of
the wind on the sails. The sloop is a light rig with fewer lines
and spars, and the sails on a sloop tend to be flat which minimizes
sideways force when well trimmed. The heeling forces are also
counterbalanced by the keel, which uses weight and
hydrodynamics to offset the forces from the rigging and
sails.
When sailing upwind, it is also important to
minimize the drag of the wind on the sail and rig. A major cause of
drag of the sail is a vortex of turbulent air
generated by the top of the mast and sail. Secondary causes are
non-optimal aerodynamic shapes of masts, stays and control lines.
The sloop minimizes the drag of the tip-vortex with a high and
narrow sail design (high aspect), maximizing the amount of sail for
a given tip-vortex compared to a square-rigged or gaff-rigged ship.
Also, the simplicity of the rig reduces the drag induced by control
lines, masts and spars.
Sails carried
To maximize the amount of sail carried, the
classical sloop may use a bowsprit, which is essentially
a fixed spar that projects forward from the bow of the boat. For
downwind sailing, the typical foresail may be replaced (or
sometimes supplemented) by larger sails known as spinnakers or gennakers. The typical foresail
known as the jib, which does
not overlap the mast more than 10 to 20 percent, may be replaced by
a genoa jib,
which overlaps the mast by as much as 55 to 100 percent for racing
rules and sometimes more. The mainsail and Genoa form an efficient
double wing.
The Bermuda Sloop
The modern yachting sloop is known as the Bermuda sloop, due to its Bermuda rig (also known as the Marconi rig, due to its resemblance to the wireless towers of Guglielmo Marconi), which is the optimal rig for upwind sailing; consequently sloops are popular with sport sailors and yachtsmen, and for racing. The rig is simple in its basic form, yet when tuned properly it is maneuverable and fast. The main disadvantage is the relatively large size of the sails, especially on larger vessels. It is also less successful sailing downwind; the addition of a spinnaker is necessary for reasonable downwind speed in all but the strongest winds, and the spinnaker is an intrinsically unstable sail requiring continual trimming.The Bermuda sloop is a type of fore-and-aft
rigged sailing vessel developed on the island of Bermuda in the 17th
century. In this sense, the term applied to small ships, rather
than boats. In its purest form, it is single-masted, although ships
with such rigging were built with as many as three masts. Its
original form had gaff rig, but
evolved to use what is now known as Bermuda rig,
making it the basis of nearly all modern sailing yachts. Although
the Bermuda sloop is often described as a development of the
narrower-beamed Jamaica sloop, which dates from the 1670s, the
high, raked masts, and triangular sails of its Bermuda rig are
rooted in a tradition of Bermudian boat design dating from the
early 17th century. Part of that tradition included long,
horizontal bowsprits, and large jibs. Three jibs were commonly used
on Bermudian ships. Triangular sails appeared on Bermudian boats
early in the 17th century, a development of the Dutch bezaan, or
leg-of-mutton rig, itself derived from the Lateen rig.
This became the Bermuda rig, and was appearing on Bermudian ships
by the early 19th century. A large spinnaker was carried on a
spinnaker boom when running down-wind.
Historic naval definition
The naval term "sloop" referred to ships with different rigs and sizes varying from navy to navy. "Sloop-of-war" was more of a reference to the purpose of the craft rather than the specific size or sailplan. The Royal Navy began buying Bermuda sloops, beginning with an order for three sloops-of-war (HMS Dasher, HMS Driver, and HMS Hunter, were each of 200 tons, armed with twelve 24 pounders) placed with Bermudian builders in 1795 http://www.geocities.com/mhicgherri/rn23.html. They were intended to counter the then-extant menace of French privateers, which the Navy's ships-of-the-line were ill-designed to counter. Eventually, Bermuda sloops became the standard advice vessels of the navy, used for communications, reconnoitering, anti-slaving, anti-smuggling, and other roles to which they were well suited. The most notable examples of these were HMS Pickle, which raced back to England with news of the British victory and the death of Admiral Lord Nelson at the end of the Battle of Trafalgar, and HMS Whiting (79 tons and four guns), which lowered anchor in the harbor of Hampton Roads on 8 July 1812, carrying dispatches. The American privateer Dash, which happened to be leaving port, seized the vessel. The crew of the Whiting had not yet received news of the American declaration of war, and her capture was the first naval action of the American War of 1812. Generally a sloop was smaller than a frigate; however, in the later days of the U.S. Navy's sailing fleet, some of the largest vessels were called sloops because they carried fewer guns than a frigate, as few as 20. The classification of sloop was similar to a corvette.Modern Naval Definition
In modern use, a sloop refers to a warship between a corvette and a frigate in size. Such vessels were common during the age of steam, but ships of this type were becoming obsolete by the Second World War. The Royal Navy used sloops, such as those of the Flower Class http://www.geocities.com/gpvillain/class.html, for numerous roles, including escort duty and anti-submarine warfare, during the Great War. The same was true during the Second World War, when the Royal Navy used the Black Swan class, but for many years, now, its smallest warships have been frigates (not including fishery patrol vessels and offshore patrol vessels, like the Peacock Class http://www.btinternet.com/~warship/Postwar/Patrol/peacock.htm).Modern civilian connotation
Sloops in their modern form were developed by the French Navy as blockade runners to circumvent Royal Navy blockades. They were later adapted to pilot boats (small ships that take a pilot out to a ship to guide it into a harbor). Later still, they were adapted to smaller revenue cutters.The first modern sloops were fitted with the
Bermuda
Rig, so called as a result of its development in Bermuda during the
17th century. This rig is also called the Marconi rig because of
the resemblance of its tall mast and complex standing rigging to
Guglielmo
Marconi's wireless
(radio) transmission antennas.
The state of the art in racing sloops today may
be seen in the
IACC yachts sailed in the America's
Cup competition. This statement is only true in that the most
money has been spent in this class, to build the fastest boats that
meet the IACC rule. Much faster sloops have been built that don't
fit the rule, using such forbidden technology as canting keels and
movable water ballast. The current Volvo
Ocean Race is using a new class, the Volvo 70 which boasts a
canting keel, carbon construction throughout and very powerful
sailplans. The 24-hour distance record was recently broken several
times, with ABN AMRO 2 setting the record distance of for a
monohull (January 2006). These boats routinely sail at or above
wind speeds and can sustain mid- speeds hour after hour.
The largest yachting sloop built to date is
Mirabella
V, with a
carbon-fiber mast that is 289 feet (90 m) high.
See also
- Sailboat
- Bermuda rig, also called a Marconi rig, the most common of the sloop rigs
- Bermuda sloop gaff or Bermuda rigged vessels built in Bermuda from the 17th to 19th Centuries
- Friendship Sloop, a traditional gaff-rigged sloop developed for the Maine lobster fishery
- Sloop John B, a traditional song about an ill-fated trip on the eponymous vessel, made famous by the Beach Boys
- Hudson River Sloop Clearwater, A traditional sloop launched in 1969 to promote environmental awareness
- Mast aft rig, a single mast rig with a mast further back than a sloop or cutter
External links
- Hudson River Sloop Woody Guthrie, a smaller Hudson River Ferry sloop operated by the Beacon Sloop Club
sloop in Bosnian: Slup
sloop in Czech: Šalupa
sloop in Danish: Slup
sloop in German: Slup
sloop in Estonian: Luup (purjekas)
sloop in Spanish: Balandra
sloop in French: Sloop
sloop in Icelandic: Slúppa
sloop in Italian: Sloop
sloop in Dutch: Sloep
sloop in Japanese: スループ
sloop in Norwegian: Slupp
sloop in Norwegian Nynorsk: Slupp
sloop in Polish: Slup
sloop in Slovak: Šalupa
sloop in Serbian: Слуп
sloop in Serbo-Croatian: Slup
sloop in Finnish: Sluuppi
sloop in Swedish: Slup
sloop in Ukrainian: Шлюп
sloop in Russian: Шлюп (тип парусного
вооружения)