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#1
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Ian,
Good luck with your advice. If it Neal that rec'v. it, it just may be late all the way around. I tried to warn him about cheap Hong Kong Sail for his Coranodo but he got stuck with them. It sure looks like that Jib was made with an Iron Cable for a Bolt Rope. Now what kind of an Idiot would accept a sail whose bolt rope was magnetic. An who would have been stupid enough to not have replaced it after owning the boat almost a year? As I said; Good Luck http://community.webtv.net/tassail/ILLDRINKTOTHAT |
#2
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![]() "Thom Stewart" wrote Good luck with your advice. If it Neal that rec'v. it, it just may be late all the way around. I tried to warn him about cheap Hong Kong Sail for his Coranodo but he got stuck with them. It sure looks like that Jib was made with an Iron Cable for a Bolt Rope. Now what kind of an Idiot would accept a sail whose bolt rope was magnetic. An who would have been stupid enough to not have replaced it after owning the boat almost a year? Duh! I don't think my little sail would fit a Coronado 27. I only wish my sails were only a year old. I think they're the originals that came with the boat. That would make them about twenty years old. No wonder the cable rusted through. They probably were put away wet with salt water on them and sat in the bag inside the boat for years before I bought it. But Ian's given me some good advice. I'm going to snip out some of the zigzag stitching and I'm gonna get all the broken rusty cable out the back way. Then I'm gonna sew it back up using the same holes. It's really hard to push a needle through the sailcloth but easy where there's already a hole. Then I'm gonna roll the sail up tight along the luff. Then I'm gonna soak the luff in a bucket with a couple inches of oxalic acid in it until the rust is gone. I googled sailmakers supplies and found a great site for things I need. http://www.sailmakerssupply.com/prod_detail_list/24 Check out those little plastic swivel hanks. I'm gonna get about eight of those and just screw them on. I can put a little bolt rope in when I put the luff tape on. No more green corroding brass hanks for me and no more corroding hank grommets. Then I'm gonna get some dacron luff tape and sew it on using a sewing machine. http://www.sailmakerssupply.com/prod_detail_list/30 Probably the five inch wide tape would be perfect. It can wrap around the luff and be about two and a half inches wide on both sides. With zigzag stitches it'll look perfect. It will also cover up the black patches. I decided I don't want another cable. It makes the sail stiff and hard to put in the bag. I can clean and scrape the grommets on the head and tack and make them look better if the acid doesn't do it. Then maybe I can use some of the oxalic acid to get rid of the stains on the rest of the sail. Then I can use something to brighten them up. They'll be almost like new. And it won't cost too much. Don't you wish you had a boat.? See all the fun your missing :-) I guess you sold yours. I didn't realize it till I read one of your posts recently. The one about how your glad you don't have a boat any more because of the snow.... Hey, you should get a little Tangerine like mine. You could keep it on a trailer in your driveway and you could go sailing when it was nice. The mast isn't too hard to get up. One person to steady it and one person to pull it up using the jib halyard. Cheers, Ellen |
#3
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![]() Ellen MacArthur wrote: "Thom Stewart" wrote Good luck with your advice. If it Neal that rec'v. it, it just may be late all the way around. I tried to warn him about cheap Hong Kong Sail for his Coranodo but he got stuck with them. It sure looks like that Jib was made with an Iron Cable for a Bolt Rope. Now what kind of an Idiot would accept a sail whose bolt rope was magnetic. An who would have been stupid enough to not have replaced it after owning the boat almost a year? Duh! I don't think my little sail would fit a Coronado 27. I only wish my sails were only a year old. I think they're the originals that came with the boat. That would make them about twenty years old. No wonder the cable rusted through. They probably were put away wet with salt water on them and sat in the bag inside the boat for years before I bought it. But Ian's given me some good advice. I'm going to snip out some of the zigzag stitching and I'm gonna get all the broken rusty cable out the back way. Then I'm gonna sew it back up using the same holes. It's really hard to push a needle through the sailcloth but easy where there's already a hole. Then I'm gonna roll the sail up tight along the luff. Then I'm gonna soak the luff in a bucket with a couple inches of oxalic acid in it until the rust is gone. I googled sailmakers supplies and found a great site for things I need. http://www.sailmakerssupply.com/prod_detail_list/24 Check out those little plastic swivel hanks. I'm gonna get about eight of those and just screw them on. I can put a little bolt rope in when I put the luff tape on. No more green corroding brass hanks for me and no more corroding hank grommets. Then I'm gonna get some dacron luff tape and sew it on using a sewing machine. http://www.sailmakerssupply.com/prod_detail_list/30 Probably the five inch wide tape would be perfect. It can wrap around the luff and be about two and a half inches wide on both sides. With zigzag stitches it'll look perfect. It will also cover up the black patches. I decided I don't want another cable. It makes the sail stiff and hard to put in the bag. I can clean and scrape the grommets on the head and tack and make them look better if the acid doesn't do it. Then maybe I can use some of the oxalic acid to get rid of the stains on the rest of the sail. Then I can use something to brighten them up. They'll be almost like new. And it won't cost too much. Don't you wish you had a boat.? See all the fun your missing :-) I guess you sold yours. I didn't realize it till I read one of your posts recently. The one about how your glad you don't have a boat any more because of the snow.... Hey, you should get a little Tangerine like mine. You could keep it on a trailer in your driveway and you could go sailing when it was nice. The mast isn't too hard to get up. One person to steady it and one person to pull it up using the jib halyard. You would be better off trashing the sail and buying a new one. Joe Cheers, Ellen |
#4
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![]() "Joe" wrote You would be better off trashing the sail and buying a new one. Probably. But then I wouldn't be able to tell people, "original sails". A boat with original sails is kewler don't you think? Cheers, Ellen |
#5
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![]() "Ellen MacArthur" wrote in message reenews.ne t... "Joe" wrote You would be better off trashing the sail and buying a new one. Probably. But then I wouldn't be able to tell people, "original sails". A boat with original sails is kewler don't you think? No. A boat with NEW sails is more desirable. Hope this helps Scotty |
#6
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![]() "Scotty" wrote No. A boat with NEW sails is more desirable. Yeah right! Then people would say. "Look at that stupid bitch. She spent two thousand dollars on sails for a 300 dollar boat." Duh! Cheers, Ellen |
#7
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Ellen MacArthur wrote:
"Scotty" wrote No. A boat with NEW sails is more desirable. Yeah right! Then people would say. "Look at that stupid bitch. She spent two thousand dollars on sails for a 300 dollar boat." Duh! Cheers, Ellen 2K for a boat that size? You really don't know how to shop. |
#8
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Ellen MacArthur wrote:
"Scotty" wrote No. A boat with NEW sails is more desirable. Yeah right! Then people would say. "Look at that stupid bitch. She spent two thousand dollars on sails for a 300 dollar boat." Duh! Cheers, Ellen Funny, I got new sails for my Albacore and the P.O. bought new sails for our yacht a few months before we bought it. Both boats are *far* older than the boat you showed us pictures of. No-one is laughing at us and most fellow skippers are quite envious. Busted, Again :-) -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL: 'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed, All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy. |
#9
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![]() "Ellen MacArthur" wrote in message reenews.ne t... "Scotty" wrote No. A boat with NEW sails is more desirable. Yeah right! Then people would say. "Look at that stupid bitch. She spent two thousand dollars on sails for a 300 dollar boat." Duh! As opposed to, ''Look at that stupid bitch with the nice knockers'' ? SV |
#10
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![]() Ellen MacArthur wrote: "Joe" wrote You would be better off trashing the sail and buying a new one. Probably. But then I wouldn't be able to tell people, "original sails". A boat with original sails is kewler don't you think? No. It detracts from the 120 dollars the boat and sails are worth. You can make enough in one night too buy new sails .... Joe Cheers, Ellen |
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