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Armond Perretta wrote:
Terry Spragg wrote: The beauty of a hanked jib with downhaul is that if you decide to change jibs, one pull on the downhaul and the sail in on deck, easing motion considerably. A little siezing and it will stay there, still hanked on, while the main is reefed, or a smaller jib is hanked above it onto the forestay. This is half a dozen or so hanks sticking out the front of a jib bag, not some monster flailing and flogging while you try to get it up. Snap on the tack pennant, change halyard connections and sheets, if you don't keep sheets attached to each spare sail, even pre leading them with the whole mess ready to pop out of the forehatch when you pull on the halyard from the cockpit. It's a small thing to do, really, nothing like pulling a soaking sail down the forehatch, then prefeeding it's replacement, hoping it will prefeed all in one go and where is the halyard located? Manage that while singlhanding. When winds ease, taking off a small jib and then hauling up the big lazy jib already hanked on is easy. I had a furler, and it's problems, that's why I prefer the idea mentioned above. It's do-able, cheap, and dependable. Did I mention sailing performance when the weather gets snotty? Is it safer to worry about changing or bagging along as it gets rougher and rougher, and when you need the performance, and have a huge wild bag to stow loose on deck and all over the place? I've been using hanked-on sails and a jib downhaul for years, and I think the system has merit (obviously). However singing this system's praises without mentioning the "cons" is oversimplification. First, the downhaul itself is an additional component of the running rigging, requiring shackles, blocks, cleats, fairleads, etc. (or at least _some_ of these). Next, the downhaul has to run either inside the hanks (usually not good), or alongside the headstay. In this position, and depending on the point of sail, it slaps against the luff, causing chafe and just one more unwelcome noise. Next, it is the rare set up that allows the jib to be handed with only a single pull on the downhaul. Usually there is some hang-up or friction that means going forward to make adjustments. All in all, I think it's a good rig if furlers are not chosen, but it is useful to add in both sides of the issue. That is all true, but a well managed downhaul and halyard is better than changing any other jib system I know of. Mine only needs to be led inside the first hank. There's a lot less to go wrong. Terry K |
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