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"Scotty" wrote in message
. .. "Scout" wrote in message news:GP- Jon (and Joe) Other than aesthetics, is there any practical value to stowing the fenders onboard? I know this doesn't look as nice, but I hate to give up any space onboard for them. I could leave them permanently tied to the dock (floating). I am essentially lazy when it comes to the small stuff, but, I am always willing to listen to good advice! If they drag in the water they'll slow you down a bit, but mostky it just looks bad. Also, are you saying I should let the mainsail carry the boom? I haven't actually tried that yet; I adjusted the lazy jacks to lift the boom enough to clear the dodger. I've never used lazy jacks before; I do like them and the roller furler too since I often sail shorthanded. Neal mentioned the lazy jacks fouling the sail and I can see some contact there, although it doesn't seem to have affected performance in any significant way. If I have to buy a new mainsail sooner than later, I guess I can live with that, but I doubt it. I believe Jon was reffering to your lazy JIB sheet. In the vid, it looks kinda tight, not a good thing, if it is. I was going to ask ,after viewing the first vid, if you sail with the bimini up and how much clearance the boom had. When I stand in my cockpit, the boom is at nose heighth. I don't see how I could sail with a bimini. Is your main haylard tight? Is it on a winch? my boom clears my bimini with no problem. the boom misses most of my guests but would crack my skull with a good swing. The main halyard is on a winch and is about as tight as I can get it. Also, I can see getting used to adjusting the jib will take some practice. It just doesn't look right, although the sails were full and according to the gps, we hit 6.8 mph later that same night with 15 mph winds. The jib sheets got tangled a bit. 6.8 is impressive. Do you have a knot log, or just using the GPS? just a gps And, I don't quite have the hang of using the self-tailing winches yet (it seems easier to pull the jib sheets by hand than it is to crank the winch (sharing one handle). I always pull the sheets by hand, as far as I can, only need the handle once there's a lot of tension on the sheet. Does your line stay in the winch okay? I don't think I'm using the winch correctly... I plan to ask some of my neighbors for a demo. Scotty |
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