Sail - online puzzles

Mary Rose Flag Ship online puzzle
63Mary Rose Flag Shipsolved 54 times
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Spirit of Adventure online puzzle
64Spirit of Adventuresolved 51 times
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HERGA online puzzle
48HERGAsolved 47 times
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Sailboats1 puzzle online from photo
16Sailboats1solved 46 times
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sailboat online puzzle
35sailboatsolved 44 times
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La Victoria online puzzle
25La Victoriasolved 43 times
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Boats puzzle online from photo
15Boatssolved 41 times
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Mountain lake in National Park High Tatra online puzzle
169Mountain lake in National Park High Tatrasolved 40 times
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Wooden pier with view on sailboat in the ocean puzzle online from photo
99Wooden pier with view on sailboat in the oceansolved 39 times
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Smooth sailing online puzzle
104Smooth sailingsolved 39 times
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Cruise ship at harbor puzzle online from photo
140Cruise ship at harborsolved 38 times
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puzzlesampv puzzle online from photo
130puzzlesampvsolved 37 times
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Danceparty puzzle online from photo
48Dancepartysolved 34 times
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teambullrich online puzzle
48teambullrichsolved 31 times
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Sailing Ship, Sydney Harbour online puzzle
168Sailing Ship, Sydney Harboursolved 31 times
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Little pirates online puzzle
150Little piratessolved 28 times
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Ship of Peter 1 puzzle online from photo
121Ship of Peter 1solved 26 times
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Pirate Ship online puzzle
48Pirate Shipsolved 25 times
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Super ship puzzle online from photo
24Super shipsolved 25 times
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Puzzle 1 puzzle online from photo
24Puzzle 1solved 24 times
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Wellington Lake Rainbow Catamaran puzzle online from photo
48Wellington Lake Rainbow Catamaransolved 22 times
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Say Yes - JMJ 1995 online puzzle
25Say Yes - JMJ 1995solved 22 times
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Rembrandt-Christ-In-The-Storm. jpg puzzle online from photo
221Rembrandt-Christ-In-The-Storm. jpgsolved 22 times
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Ship on the wave online puzzle
252Ship on the wavesolved 17 times
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Leooeoeoe puzzle online from photo
140Leooeoeoesolved 15 times
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Sailing ship online puzzle
96Sailing shipsolved 15 times
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Sailing fun puzzle online from photo
48Sailing funsolved 14 times
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In the net of promises puzzle online from photo
28In the net of promisessolved 14 times
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Sea of Galie puzzle online from photo
221Sea of Galiesolved 12 times
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Kolonyalismo online puzzle
110Kolonyalismosolved 11 times
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Trafalgar battle puzzle online from photo
200Trafalgar battlesolved 10 times
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Mission 2: Puzzle online puzzle
28Mission 2: Puzzlesolved 10 times
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A ship on the waves puzzle online from photo
180A ship on the wavessolved 10 times
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Long Pier puzzle online from photo
126Long Piersolved 8 times
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Online puzzle Sail

Sail

A sail is a tensile structure—which is made from fabric or other membrane materials—that uses wind power to propel sailing craft, including sailing ships, sailboats, windsurfers, ice boats, and even sail-powered land vehicles. Sails may be made from a combination of woven materials—including canvas or polyester cloth, laminated membranes or bonded filaments—usually in a three- or four-sided shape.

A sail provides propulsive force via a combination of lift and drag, depending on its angle of attack—its angle with respect to the apparent wind. Apparent wind is the air velocity experienced on the moving craft and is the combined effect of the true wind velocity with the velocity of the sailing craft. Angle of attack is often constrained by the sailing craft's orientation to the wind or point of sail. On points of sail where it is possible to align the leading edge of the sail with the apparent wind, the sail may act as an airfoil, generating propulsive force as air passes along its surface—just as an airplane wing generates lift—which predominates over aerodynamic drag retarding forward motion. The more that the angle of attack diverges from the apparent wind as a sailing craft turns downwind, the more drag increases and lift decreases as propulsive forces, until a sail going downwind is predominated by drag forces. Sails are unable to generate propulsive force if they are aligned too closely to the wind.

Sails may be attached to a mast, boom or other spar or may be attached to a wire that is suspended by a mast. They are typically raised by a line, called a halyard, and their angle with respect to the wind is usually controlled by a line, called a sheet. In use, they may be designed to be curved in both directions along their surface, often as a result of their curved edges. Battens may be used to extend the trailing edge of a sail beyond the line of its attachment points.

Other non-rotating airfoils that power sailing craft include wingsails, which are rigid wing-like structures, and kites that power kite-rigged vessels, but do not employ a mast to support the airfoil and are beyond the scope of this article.