Pinnacle
Well-Known Member
Our boat has twin backstays that run right up to the top of the mast. I want to be able to adjust the tension in the forestay to reduce it sagging and making the luff of the sail fuller as it gets windier. ( Sorry, my dinghy racing roots are showing through! ) I am contemplating having a new backstay arrangement made up as follows;
New single backstay in 1x19 wire of the same dia as forestay, coming down say 50% of the way to the deck. A small triangular plate on its end and then a separate standing 1x19 wire ( maybe one size dia down from the forstay ) down to each existing stainless plate on the transom. Fix a pair of blocks across the gap between the twin backstays and use a multi-purchase block system with a jammer fixed to the transom close to the wheel, so I can pull the two blocks down towards the transom. This will pull the the backstays together and increase the fore and aft tension in the rig.
This is a pretty common arrangement and does have the advantage that even if by mistake I let go of the tensioning rope completely ( or one of the blocks were to fail ) the rig should stay up.
I hope all of the above makes sense!
Questions - when the twin blocks are pulled downwards, they will increasingly alter the straightness of the wire and require it to bend around the sheeve in the block. Will 1x19 be ok for this, or do I need to have the twin lower backstays made from 7x19? Is there a special kind of block/sheeve I should be using?
What does the panel think?
New single backstay in 1x19 wire of the same dia as forestay, coming down say 50% of the way to the deck. A small triangular plate on its end and then a separate standing 1x19 wire ( maybe one size dia down from the forstay ) down to each existing stainless plate on the transom. Fix a pair of blocks across the gap between the twin backstays and use a multi-purchase block system with a jammer fixed to the transom close to the wheel, so I can pull the two blocks down towards the transom. This will pull the the backstays together and increase the fore and aft tension in the rig.
This is a pretty common arrangement and does have the advantage that even if by mistake I let go of the tensioning rope completely ( or one of the blocks were to fail ) the rig should stay up.
I hope all of the above makes sense!
Questions - when the twin blocks are pulled downwards, they will increasingly alter the straightness of the wire and require it to bend around the sheeve in the block. Will 1x19 be ok for this, or do I need to have the twin lower backstays made from 7x19? Is there a special kind of block/sheeve I should be using?
What does the panel think?