wormy said...
how can a whistle come from a fin anyway its underwater????
It's to do with vibration in the fin due to unbalanced loading, and usually turbulence of some kind - the fin gets loaded up one way, then the modulus of elasticity in the fin overcomes the load, and flicks it back the other way, where it loads up and flicks back again.. all very very small deflections, very fast. This causes a high frequency vibration, some of which is transmitted through the fin box and into the board which then acts somewhat like a guitar body. If you're (un)lucky you can find the harmonic frequency of your board.
We get a similar effect with composite glider wings - shortly after they start really screaming, they explode!
So, technically, the whistle you hear comes via the board, but it's usually caused by the fin!
I'm guessing it's the rig in this case though, as sheeting in to windward tends to load up the fin, and assuming you still have some speed on, should make any fin hum worse, not better (unless it's moved outside the frequency range that your board is able to sing!).
My HPL boom has some closed cell foam in the extension arms, so that the 'spare' holes aren't really open - you could try that.
I also had a Pryde sail that would whistle on a particular point of sail- it turned out to be the luff sleeve vibrating behind the cut out as the air hit it straight on. Like using a piece of grass to whistle..