Parts of a sail

Leech

The trailing edge, from head to clew — where the wind leaves the sail.

DutchAchterlijkour Dutch loft →
The leech is the after edge of the sail. It is where air exits, so it does more than any other edge to decide how the sail behaves: too tight and the sail stalls and heels the boat, too open and you spill power.

On a mainsail the leech is usually curved outward well past the straight head-to-clew line. That extra area is the roach, and it is held out by battens. On a genoa the leech is normally cut slightly hollow instead, so it doesn't hook into the mainsail.

Most sails carry a thin adjustable line inside the leech tape to stop it fluttering. Flutter is not cosmetic — it is the single fastest way to destroy a sail. See sail care.

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