| Re: safety and tuning
[Re: catmech]
#70479 03/28/06 01:14 PM 03/28/06 01:14 PM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK Jalani
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Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK | The tail of your mainsheet should be tied onto the traveller control line. That way you don't have an end that will fall into the water. You will have a length of sheet that will want to drag in the water, but because it's attached at both ends it's easy to lob it back onto the tramp if it washes off.
John Alani ___________ Stealth F16s GBR527 and GBR538 | | | Re: safety and tuning
[Re: Jalani]
#70480 03/28/06 01:29 PM 03/28/06 01:29 PM |
Joined: Oct 2005 Posts: 1,152 tampa, fl ksurfer2
old hand
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old hand
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 1,152 tampa, fl | I have only been sailing for a short time on my 6.0 with the shute. I have gained a lot of confidence with this recently, but the hardest thing to get through my head was the uncleating of the traveler to ease it. When uncleating the mainsheet, it is a downward flip of the sheet to uncleat it, but with the traveler it is an upward flip of the sheet. There were a few panic situations that arose from this confusion, but no capsizes (yet). Good luck with your shute, once you get comfortable with it, you'll wonder why you ever sailed without it!
If your havin girl problems i feel bad for you son I got 99 problems but my beautiful wife ain't one | | | Re: safety and tuning
[Re: ksurfer2]
#70481 03/28/06 06:54 PM 03/28/06 06:54 PM |
Joined: Jul 2001 Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC Tornado
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Posts: 1,200 Vancouver, BC | Go over the entire front of the boat to locate & tape off snag/tear points for the Spinny. I even tape off the mast hounds & shroud attachment flange. I like to use the new type of weather-proof duct tape...transparent, doesn't distintegrate over a few weeks outdoors like the old grey stuff and doesn't leave a horrible goo after removal. Made by 3M.
Other advice is to not over tension the halyard. A year ago at the Tornado Nats in Houston, the advice was to set the pole tip such that you could grab the spinny luff and rotate your closed fist through 90 degrees (from near vertical to horizontal) before the sail stopped you. Then at the last big T event end of January, all the top guys had switched to setting the halyard quite a bit tighter than this...so you could only do about 10 degrees of fist rotation. Much more tension and you stretch out the luff quickly.
What are others doing here?
Mike.
Last edited by Tornado; 03/28/06 06:56 PM.
Mike Dobbs Tornado CAN 99 "Full Tilt"
| | | Re: safety and tuning
[Re: Tornado]
#70482 03/28/06 09:35 PM 03/28/06 09:35 PM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 606 League City, TX flumpmaster
addict
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addict
Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 606 League City, TX | Go over the entire front of the boat to locate & tape off snag/tear points for the Spinny. I even tape off the mast hounds & shroud attachment flange. I like to use the new type of weather-proof duct tape...transparent, doesn't distintegrate over a few weeks outdoors like the old grey stuff and doesn't leave a horrible goo after removal. Made by 3M.
Other advice is to not over tension the halyard. A year ago at the Tornado Nats in Houston, the advice was to set the pole tip such that you could grab the spinny luff and rotate your closed fist through 90 degrees (from near vertical to horizontal) before the sail stopped you. Then at the last big T event end of January, all the top guys had switched to setting the halyard quite a bit tighter than this...so you could only do about 10 degrees of fist rotation. Much more tension and you stretch out the luff quickly.
What are others doing here?
Mike. 'bout 45 degrees on the Tiger - easing out the tack a fraction if we overstand or need to reach. Chris. | | | Re: safety and tuning
[Re: Rolf_Nilsen]
#70484 03/29/06 08:33 AM 03/29/06 08:33 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | While Sailing the I20 last weekend with a mainsheet that was considerably too long (it wasn't my boat so I wasn't about to start chopping lines), I handed the sheet to David after just assuming the lead, tacking, and popping out on the wire. David went to sheet it in and realized we had an issue. The slack had dropped in the water and wrapped around the windward rudder. We tried flying a hull and everything and couldn't get it to come free. David finally had to go in and raise the rudder because we wouldn't have been able to tack otherwise.
The mainsheet should be long enough that the crew can run it from the trapeze while the skipper hangs on to the traveler leaving two to three feet of slack between them.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: safety and tuning
[Re: PTP]
#70490 03/30/06 05:55 AM 03/30/06 05:55 AM |
Joined: Feb 2006 Posts: 3,348 fin. OP
Carpal Tunnel
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OP
Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 3,348 | Pete- I'll fall off the boat in the middle of the Hogsbreath and that will be your chance to learn it all.. I hope someone gets pix! Mike. Thank you. Clearly you put a lot of effort into that last post. It will take some time to digest. I appreciate it. ". . .trailer sailing. . ." ![](http://www.catsailor.com/forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif)
Last edited by Tikipete; 03/30/06 06:08 AM.
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