| How do you tie your battens? #21207 06/20/03 06:38 PM 06/20/03 06:38 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake OP
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | I've got a new set of sails for my boat and decided to get the matched battens but the (tiny) problem is that there is about three different sizes in width. I happen to have previously purchased (by mistake) two different sizes of the plastic caps that have a hole and a v-jam in them but neither of them fit very well and I recently experienced one kind of them quickly loosing hold of the batten tie and letting three battens loose while under sail.
I can tie a series of small knots in the line so it will positively grab the v-jam but besides that taking forever to set up, it doesn't solve the problem that some of these caps don't fit the battens well. I could also fit the caps with epoxy/micro balloons to get a good fit but again, time consuming pain in the a$$.
What are you guys using? Does anyone ACTUALLY use the hole in the end of the batten for tying and if so, how do you tie it so that A) it is secure and B) the tension can quickly be changed?
Jake Kohl | | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: Jake]
#21208 06/20/03 06:52 PM 06/20/03 06:52 PM |
Joined: May 2003 Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL TheoA
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Posts: 139 Daytona Beach FL | good question. I'm tired of tieing my battens and untieing them everytime I sail. Hopefully there is a solution to this that would allow adjustable tension, with ease of changing and relieveing tension.
94 N5.5SL
| | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: TheoA]
#21209 06/20/03 07:31 PM 06/20/03 07:31 PM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
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Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | First of all, never trust plastic for cleats, whether V cleat or clam cleat or cam cleat. You need to tie your battens in with a couple of half-hitches (or whatever knot works best for you). And, obviously, this is going to sound really dumb to all you high-tech sailors, but Rick and I don't like to have to try to get everything dialed in perfectly again every time we sail, so we always tie our battens in at the beginning of the season and we leave them that way until the end of the season. In Florida, that means forever. I can almost hear the groans from the purists who believe in relieving their batten tension whenever they are not sailing -- and those like Jake, who want to be able to change their batten tension easily and quickly. So, please don't follow our example. But, on the other hand, we have paid our dues when it comes to battens. Rick and I are from the same generation that back in the 1960's used to be up all hours of the night before a regatta shaving battens to get that draft exactly right in the sail from top to bottom. And we would lay the boat over on its side with the sail up and roll a marble down the sail to make sure the symmetry of the draft was correct. If not, more shaving. I'm sure that yacht clubs up and down the East Coast still have fiberglass particles in their yards from all the shaving cat sailors did back then. So when people worry about how to secure their battens at the ends of the pockets, that's a minor problem compared to what we used to go through in the search of perfection.  Thank goodness for tapered battens.
Last edited by Mary; 06/20/03 08:00 PM.
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[Re: Mary]
#21211 06/20/03 08:38 PM 06/20/03 08:38 PM |
Joined: Sep 2002 Posts: 22 New Jersey Bob_Fraser
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Posts: 22 New Jersey | I would agree with Mary
I recieved my new sails today and the advice from the sailmaker, a well regarded catamaran sailor, was to tension them battens to eliminate any wrinkles and leave them alone. Furthermore he did not think it was necessary to release batten tension between sails. The main thing in his opinion was to get the wrinkles out and use other adjustments for sail shape.
Sail Faster! Bob Fraser P19MX w/spin
Bob Fraser H20
| | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: Jake]
#21212 06/20/03 09:07 PM 06/20/03 09:07 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA Kevin Rose
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Posts: 397 Burlington, Vermont USA | Does anyone ACTUALLY use the hole in the end of the batten for tying and if so, how do you tie it so that A) it is secure and B) the tension can quickly be changed? Jake, I use the hole to tie them. More than half the time I forget to loosen them after a sail. While I understand the theory, my sailing is not at a level where I notice the difference from varying batten tension. I did, however, replace my battens with a set I got from Randy Smyth. They really seemed to give the sail a better shape. When I swapped them out, I noticed the effect of rolling the sail with the battens not quite parallel. The old battens had taken on a sort of a twisted shape. Don't know if that was affecting performance, but now I'm pretty careful to be sure and roll the sail with the battens parallel to the roll.
Kevin Rose
N6.0na #215
Lake Champlain (New England's "west coast")
Burlington, Vermont
| | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: carlbohannon]
#21215 06/22/03 08:22 AM 06/22/03 08:22 AM |
Joined: Jun 2002 Posts: 1,658 Florida Suncoast, Dunedin Caus... catman
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Posts: 1,658 Florida Suncoast, Dunedin Caus... | A good way to be able to repeat the same batten tension and still be able to loosen the battens is tie a small button on to the line. Tie it so it's easy to loosen and adjust. If you don't want to use the plastic caps you can notch a small "V" or take a hack saw and put a 1/4" deep cut at the end of the batten and hook the button there.
Have Fun Mike
Have Fun
| | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: carlbohannon]
#21216 06/24/03 05:29 PM 06/24/03 05:29 PM |
Joined: Dec 2002 Posts: 22 MN tbosch
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Posts: 22 MN | I agree with Mary. I tie my battens at the beginning of the season for everthing except stock Hobie sails.
Okay, I'll bite. Why treat the stock Hobie sails differently? Does dacron loose it's shape? I loosen my battens after every sail and grumble while tightening them prior to the next one... -Todd, TheMightyHobie18 in MN | | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: Mike Fahle]
#21219 06/24/03 09:21 PM 06/24/03 09:21 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake OP
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | I think I know the system you refer to. My Calvert Square head I bought for my 5.2 came with nylon straps sewn into the leech end of each batton pocket and the plastic buckle on the opposing leech side. It was a great and very secure way to lock in batten tension. However, that would require me taking the sail to a sailmaker and getting all this sewn in place. Is this what you are talking about? I'm leaning more and more towards just leaving them set permenantly - If I can sleep at night.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: Jake]
#21220 06/24/03 10:46 PM 06/24/03 10:46 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 283 hobie541
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Posts: 283 | I think I know the system you refer to. My Calvert Square head I bought for my 5.2 came with nylon straps sewn into the leech end of each batton pocket and the plastic buckle on the opposing leech side. It was a great and very secure way to lock in batten tension. However, that would require me taking the sail to a sailmaker and getting all this sewn in place. Is this what you are talking about? I'm leaning more and more towards just leaving them set permenantly - If I can sleep at night. We catsailors like to think of ourselves as being pretty high tech, but really, we don't hold a candle to windsurfers. I believe Calvert has a long standing historyin the world of windsurfing. The batten tensioning system you're talking about is used extensively on windsurfing sails. Cheers!  Tim J.
Tim D. Johnson
Hobie 20 #690
Bald Eagle Yacht Club, Fleet 52
www.beyc.org | | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: Steve_Kwiksilver]
#21222 06/25/03 07:11 AM 06/25/03 07:11 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake OP
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Ooooo - tell me more? Allen Screws? Hmmmm... A little stainless wire, a nut and a tack welder, ooooo.. Tell us More! Tell us More! (Ohh and BTW - I sail a Nacra).
Last edited by Jake; 06/25/03 09:47 AM.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: How do you tie your battens?
[Re: Jake]
#21224 06/26/03 06:37 AM 06/26/03 06:37 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 612 Cape Town, South Africa Steve_Kwiksilver
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Posts: 612 Cape Town, South Africa | We went to North Sails to develop a new mylar mainsail for our class (Mosquito), they came up with the Allen-key thingy, it`s a plastic end-cap of sorts with an allen-key head in the back of it which fits over the end of the batten. It`s very neat, no string & knots hanging behind your sail, can`t come undone by itself, and reduces drag. I`d imagine you`d have to have webbing straps sewn onto your sail to retro-fit this system to an existing sail, but that would be easy. A few turns of the key & you get tension, if you like de-tensioning your battens & retensioning each time you sail, just remember the number of turns you undo, & put them back in next time. I tend to leave them tensioned, and I don`t lose any sleep over it. I think if you have Dacron it might be good to release the tension, I have mylar & I`m lazy. The dig at the Hobie guys was the "just kidding" part. I used to sail a Dart 18, but found that antiquated class rules that tell you to use dacron sails and then charge you as if you`re buying kevlar, made me look at a class with more open rules. Now I buy Mylar sails which are really well put together (including the batten-ends AND battens)at a lower price than I`d pay for a dacron Dart 18 sail WITHOUT battens. Classes which have rules that have the intention of making their boats cost less very often acchieve that, but the one-manufacturer classes don`t pass the cost saving onto the buyer, so you get an average product at an above-average price. I buy into one-design, but one-manufacturer classes are pushing the cost of sailing way beyond acceptable.
There, now I`ve had my say. I`ll post a pic of the batten tensioner when I can get my mainsail & a digital camera near eachother.
Cheers Steve | | |
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