Rigging Dimensions
The four foretriangle measurements sailmakers need to quote a new suit.
I ?
55.28 ft
J ?
15.10 ft
P ?
49.38 ft
E ?
15.63 ft
Sail Area Breakdown
Calculated from rigging dimensions. Use these as your starting point when ordering a new suit.
| Sail | Area (ft²) | Area (m²) |
|---|---|---|
| MainsailP × E ÷ 2 | 385.9 | 35.9 |
| 100% ForetriangleI × J ÷ 2 | 417.4 | 38.8 |
| 150% GenoaTypical light-air headsail | 626.0 | 58.2 |
| Storm Jib~50% of foretriangle, high-cut | 208.7 | 19.4 |
| Symmetric SpinnakerEstimated from I, J | 1,502.5 | 139.6 |
| Total Working Sail AreaMain + 100% foretriangle | 803.3 | 74.6 |
Foretriangle Diagram
Drawn to scale from published I, J, P, E measurements — Masthead Sloop · Judel/Vrolijk design
Performance Ratios
How the Baltic 40 carries its sail relative to its displacement.
SA/D Ratio
21.2
Powerful cruiser/racer — quick in light air, reef early in a blow.
Mast Height (above DWL)
— ft
Air draft not published — measure yours before any bridge transit.
Ballast Ratio
41%
Stiff enough to carry a 150% genoa comfortably into moderate breeze.
Typical Sail Inventory
What Baltic 40 owners usually carry and what's worth buying used vs. new.
Mainsail 385.9 ft²
Dacron cross-cut with 2 reef points is standard. Full-batten is a common upgrade.
Replace new
150% Genoa 626.0 ft²
The workhorse headsail. Most boats have one on a furler by now.
Replace new
110% Working Jib ~459 ft²
Good secondary sail for breezy days — used market is strong.
Buy used
Storm Jib 208.7 ft²
Bright orange recommended. Rarely used, hard to justify new.
Buy used
Asymmetric Spinnaker ~1,503 ft²
Popular downwind upgrade — easier than symmetric for shorthanded sailing.
Optional
Replacement Cost Estimator
Get a rough price range for a new mainsail and genoa for the Baltic 40 — Dacron, laminate, and cruising performance tiers.