Balbas
Well-Known Member
I have a boom furling system on my longbow - made by some French company who's name I forget. It works surprisingly well, the only downsides (that I can see) being thatThe average roller boom sail on a simple round boom gets steadily fuller as you reef: the luff rope either builds up a lump near the tack or slips down against the gooseneck, which does less harm to sail shape but can damage the luff itself.
It can work pretty well, but often doesn't, and to get a kicker on you either have to have a "reefing claw" that rubs the sailcloth or organise a wrapped-in strop, which again doesn't do the cloth much good. I've sailed a few boats with roller booms that worked well, but more that didn't.
a) the rotation mechanism makes the boom stand an inch or so off the mast, so rather than pulling the sail up the mast track, there is a foil - approx. 1 inch which lives on the mast track. This then carries another track up which the main is hoist.
b) the kicker is non conventional. There is a wire strop run from one end of the boom to the other. At about 1/3 of it's length along (at the mast end), there is a SS ring, to which the kicker attaches. There's a swivel on both ends of the boom - to which this wire runs - so it always remains below the boom and doesn't cause any dramas with furling or reefing whatsoever.
My system is run back to the cockpit, so the reefing/furling process is:-
i) stick a turn of the (continuous) reefing line onto the coachroof winch and into the self tailer
ii) release both reefing line brakes
iii) ease the main halyard whilst winding in the reefing mechanism
with practice its simple enough to either reef or completely furl single handed. Note the lack of reefing pennants or requirement to go forward to the mast.
If I was specifying a replacement system I would probably go for a traditional slab reefing and a stack pack, but I don't think there's anything particularly wrong or inherently bad about the setup I've got. OK, sail shape might not be the absolute best at all times, but for a short handed sailor it's actually got some advantages imo.