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anon wrote: On Mon, 22 Dec 2003 19:05:17 GMT, wrote: Sorry 'bout that. All of the sailing boats I've been around had poles so somehow assumed that everyone did. We didn't have one, but Bob made one and installed it on the front of the mast so we use it as you suggest. http://www12.virtualtourist.com/m/tt/31714/#TL is a picture of him doing that. We rarely - almost never - use it to pole out the head sail (and we have a yankee jib), but we use it a lot for dinghy launch and retrieval. One comment on your design. Those one inch dowels aren't going to be very strong and if "poly-piping" is PVC piping it doesn't have much strength. With my setup, initially the spinnicker pole is just about horizontal in order to reach far enough out to lift the dinghy horizontally (level) and have sufficient clearence to avoid bashing the topsides of either vessel against the other. This puts some pretty high loads on the pole. I'd do some testting to be sure that one inch dowel would be strong enough. On Mon, 22 Dec 2003, anon wrote: wrote: I assume that you are using this dinghy with a sailboat? yes If so use the spinnicker pole as a derrick. connect the pole to the mast; connect the pole lift and rig a two, three, whatever, part tackle between the pole and then dink. You probably should also rig for and aft lines to the end of the pole to control swing while you're hauling the dinghy. Cheers . . . Of course, I agree with this . . . if one has a spinnaker or like pole. As it happens (actually: it didn't just "happen" and instead for us was a matter of choice), we don't, having opted instead for a near functional equivalent to a spinnaker or gennaker but with (for us) more ease-of-handling yet don't-give-up-performance features (i.e., Doyle's self-furling "utility power sail" a/k/a "UPS")). My earlier suggestion, quoted in part below, thus is correspondingly meant to (and does) perform exactly the functions in pretty much the same manner as use of a spinnaker pole you summarize above yet also with more collapsable/stow-able ease.* ----------------------- * Three 1"-diameter dowels capped with poly-piping at the end acting as collars which, when slotted together, make pole which can be attached at one end to the mast, held up near the other end with a spare halyard, and with pulleys at the over-the-water end (and, again, [acts as a "derrick" and] which when done can be removed and stowed conveniently). Cheers, anon (reply to k4556[at]inet[dot]co[dot]th) grandma Rosalie S/V RosalieAnn, Leonardtown, MD CSY 44 WO #156 http://home.mindspring.com/~gmbeasley/id2.html |