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Edgar wrote:
"Ellen MacArthur" wrote "Walt" wrote BTW, dinghy sailors know how to tune rig tension ourselves. We don't need a $110/hr consultant to do it for us. How do you do it? No, it is not harder. Tighten all three up to a decent tension so that the mast is upright and there is no slackness that can lead to fatigue failure when not in use. Then, when you hoist your jib, tension up the jib really hard so that the forestay does go a bit slack and the luff wire of the jib has all the tension. The remaining two shrouds will then be correctly tensioned. Well, this depends on the boat. I'd say consult the tuning guide for your boat and sails. (yes, the progeny of the sails makes a difference.) For my boat, I keep the forestay very loose with several inches of sag. Then I raise the jib on shore and tension the rig to 150 lbs as measured by a Loos gauge - at this point the forestay is completely slack. This gives me a nominal setting which I mark, and I'll go up or down from there as needed. The jib halyard is tweaked constantly while sailing (every 30 to 60 seconds) as conditions dictate - more tension for pointing, less for speed, and quite slack when sailing off the wind. Other boats are different. Don't try this with a keelboat. //Walt |
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