Sailing activity by Richard Gibb on 04.07.2026
Analytics & Coaching
Upwind speed
| Speed over ground [kn] | Velocity made good to windward (VMG) [kn] | Angle to the wind | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 5.56 kn | 4.05 kn | 44.91 |
| Starboard tack | 5.22 kn | 3.92 kn | 39.89 |
| Port tack | 6.06 kn | 3.62 kn | 52.26 |
Tacking
During the upwind legs, 12 tacks were detected.
Tack angle
The tack angle is the change in heading through a tack — the angle between the course sailed before and after the manoeuvre. A smaller angle means a tighter, more efficient tack that keeps the boat closer to the wind, while a larger angle indicates more heading was lost during the turn. The box shows the middle 50 % of tacks (Q1–Q3), the line marks the median, and the thin bar spans the full range. Comparing starboard-to-port and port-to-starboard can reveal whether tacking is consistently better on one gybe.