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Roger Long wrote: As a traditional sailor with most of my time behind gaffs and bowsprits, I am more than familiar with sweating. It is amazing what you can move that way. As someone points out below, my halyards are internal and the fitting locations are not optimum for old fashioned tug and grunt. Sweating or the winch worked OK on the working jib but the 150 roller furling genoa with the foam and double cloth layer in the leading edge seems to need a lot of tension to set right. Due to the loss mechanical advantage with the turning block, I actually had to sweat on the tackle line. It's short but it still worked well. When I get the mast off the boat and relocate a lot of the stuff, I'll raise the cleats which will help. I'd go with a triple block if I did this again and certainly if the boat was any larger. I agree that on a 30 foot or under boat, one with hank jib, or jibs a standard leading edge, you can get by with sweating alone if the halyards are external or exit high enough on the mast. -- Roger Long I'm glad to find somebody else who thinks this way. I have pulled gaffs and sails up much larger than most cruisers by a little mechanical advantage and some sweating. The arangement you have is similar to running rigging on a raceing yacht from the late 1900's , the yacht was class leader for more than 30 years so it cant be that bad an idea. |
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