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Bart's Project Report....
my RF has it's own halyard, so-to-speak.
!!!!!Bwahahaha!!! I'm not kidding. Scotty Potti is a total idiot..so to speak. RB |
Bart's Project Report....
You'll have to explain how that works. I was taught there's no such thing as a
free lunch. Remember, a Nonsuch 30 has a 540 sq ft main and requires end of boom sheeting. The mast is about 27 feet from the stern, and the optimal downwind angle is 180 degrees in any wind. "SAIL LOCO" wrote in message ... Since a Nonsuch is often sailed more like a dinghy, and the amount of line you have to haul in to go from dead downwind to close hauled is huge (about 70 feet) it was very nice. Buy a Harken double ended mainsheet fiddle. You could pull in twice as much line with the same effort. S/V Express 30 "Ringmaster" "No shirt, no skirt, full service" |
Bart's Project Report....
You'll have to explain how that works. I was taught there's no such thing
as a free lunch.. Just pick up a Harken catalog. S/V Express 30 "Ringmaster" "No shirt, no skirt, full service" |
Bart's Project Report....
I've thought about that but rejected it as on Ella the topping lift wire
is too small to be used as a main halyard. Is yours wire or braid and how does it compare in size to your main halyard? Cheers Jeff Morris wrote: Roller furling still has a halyard - how else would it get up there? I have main, jib and spinnaker, plus a spare messenger on a sheave, plus a flag halyard. In a pinch, the topping lift could be used as a halyard. "Capt. Mooron" wrote in message ... "Bobsprit" wrote in message ... | BTW.... how many halyards do you have on Alien?? | | 5. Can you name them? WOW... you have 5 sheaves on your masthead?? I only have 4 halyards..... but I can rig and run 6 on my mast...all internal. Hey... maybe I'll use my old main and jib halyard to run all 6 this year. Then again all my jibs are hank ons so the feasibility of running two jibs on one forestay exist. I carry 2 main halyards and 2 jib halyards.... one of which doubles as a spinnaker halyard. I thought you had roller furling? If so.... I'd be hard pressed to figure why you have 5 halyards... unless 3 of them are never used. I've never seen a photo of Alien with a chute.... or a storm trysail rigged. CM |
Bart's Project Report....
Wonder why it got called a lift?
Cheers Bobsprit wrote: In a pinch, the topping lift could be used as a halyard. Good point. And technically the topping lift IS a halyard. RB |
Bart's Project Report....
What does it measure, tangles in a line?
Cheers Bobsprit wrote: You had brand new standing rigging inspected? Man... that costs money up here.It's a C-note service call. I had the fittings inspected and it cost me nothing. The fellow who does the work for my yard is a close friend. Of course, I had to help him install and adjust a knotmeter last week. RB |
Bart's Project Report....
Huh?
Cheers SAIL LOCO wrote: Since a Nonsuch is often sailed more like a dinghy, and the amount of line you have to haul in to go from dead downwind to close hauled is huge (about 70 feet) it was very nice. Buy a Harken double ended mainsheet fiddle. You could pull in twice as much line with the same effort. |
Bart's Project Report....
"SAIL LOCO" wrote in message ... Buy a Harken double ended mainsheet fiddle. You could pull in twice as much line with the same effort. You'll have to explain how that works. I was taught there's no such thing as a free lunch. Just pick up a Harken catalog. I'm sorry - I keep looking through the catalog and can't find anything that pulls twice as much line with the same effort. If I put two together will it do 4 times as much with the same effort? How about 10? Then I could jibe only pulling an inch, with the same effort! |
Bart's Project Report....
OzOne wrote in message ... On Mon, 10 May 2004 14:20:44 -0400, "Jeff Morris" scribbled thusly: You'll have to explain how that works. I was taught there's no such thing as a free lunch. Remember, a Nonsuch 30 has a 540 sq ft main and requires end of boom sheeting. The mast is about 27 feet from the stern, and the optimal downwind angle is 180 degrees in any wind. even more reason to have a dual system. Hauling an end boom sheeted main is a breeze with only minimal purchase then when the load goes on you cleat off the coarse and switch to the fine end for trimming. You'll be amazed at the amount of sheet you save by knocking out a couple of purchases. The stock setup only has 2:1 purchase to start. Some people reduce that to 1:1 in light air when racing, but I never raced my Nonsuch so I never bothered. You can then have a higher purchase system on the fine because you're trimming over a shorter distance. I suppose this would be of some value to a racer, but the real win with the wishbone rig is the ability to shape the sail while underway with the choker and topping lift. Gybes wil be a breeze because you can centre the main so much faster without the extra line to haul. Its hard to have much less than 2:1. If the wind was light, I would just reach out and grab the doubled sheet and haul that in, effectively 1:1. If the wind was so strong I couldn't haul the mainsheet by hand, I usually did a "chicken jibe," tacking around, rather wondering if the boom would explode in a real jibe. |
Bart's Project Report....
Bobsprit wrote:
I flew the spin maybe 5 or 6 times last season, ... 5 or 6 times in a whole season?? You are *kidding*, right? -- Wally www.forthsailing.com www.wally.myby.co.uk |
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