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![]() Went to a seminar on singlehanding or single watchstanding safety. The panel members have all solo circunavigated. Lots of good info but here are three I wanted to sha 1) When securing the vang to the boom don't rely on just the under boom fitting. Also pass a canvas or cloth strop from the end of the vang over the boom, under the sail. This works unless you have a bolt rope. The idea is to put the strain on the top of the boom and spread it out rather than on a fitting underneath that will eventually break due to fatigue of metal. 2) Instead of relying on the single length tether on your safety harness put one in the cockpit (two if the foreward one won't reach aft to the wind vane etc., one by the vang, one by the stays'l and one by the jib/forestay and anchor area plus one by the mast. Make each one the right length for what you are doing. For example the one at the mast should be short, maybe a foot to 18". Then use the regular one to get from spot to spot along the jacklines. (side note ) I learned to run a second line from the upper end of the bow pulpit up to just about elbow height on the lower shroud and then down to the pushpit. Set so that boom and jib sheet etc. clear. When go forward in rough seas you have deck jackline, toe rail, two lifelines (to 30" high) and this higher line so you are caught toe, above the knee and just below the shoulder. 3) Running Rigging - As a rule of thumb figure they will last 30,000 nm. Cut them at least 10' longer than normal. Then every 3,000 nm cut off a foot and move everything along the route, through the blocks etc, to a new sport. This keeps the line from wearing in only one spot as it lays in the sheaves. Also means you don't have to end for end quite so much. That can be done at 15,000 nm at which point you reverse the procedure. So there's three good ideas I came away with! Michael |
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