| • Science | • People | • Locations | • Timeline |
| Contents |
Square rig can also describe individual four-cornered sails suspended from yardarms, and carried on either a square rigged or a mainly fore-and-aft rigged vessel, such as one with either a bermuda rigged or gaff rigged mainsail.
A mast is considered square rigged if its course is square rigged, but normally if this is the case it will have a complete set of square rigged sails. If the course is fore-and-aft, square topsails can still be carried in front of the mast.
Square rigged vessels range in size from small sloops to full rigged ships. However even for the largest vessels, the rig has been largely replaced by fore-and-aft gaff rigs and bermuda rigs, which give superior all-around performance with far smaller and less skilled crews. Similarly, hybrid vessels carrying some square-rigged sails have largely disappeared.
A square rigged sail is not in fact square, but more nearly trapezoidal, being symmetrical but longer in the foot than the head. Like all sails it is three-dimensional, and its curve or belly means its foot is not a straight line at all. It is fixed to a spar along its head, and its clews are controlled by sheetIn sailing, a sheet is a line attached to the clew of a sail, and is the main control used in trimming the sail. sailing vessels and rigging.s, often run to blocksIn sailing, a block is a pulley or a number of pulleys enclosed in sheaves so as to be fixed to the end of a line or to a spar or surface. sailing vessels and rigging. on the spar immediately below the sail.
Modern square rigged ships are still used for training, tourism and ceremonial purposes.
All the above rigs normally carry a number of jibA jib is a triangular staysail set ahead of the foremost mast of a sailing boat. Its tack is fixed to the bowsprit, to the bow, or to the deck between the bowsprit and the foremost mast. Jibs and spinnakers are the two main types of headsails on a moderns and at least one spanker, and may also carry fore-and-aft staysails between the masts.