Dutch01527
Well-Known Member
I have a 26 foot trailer sailer and have had a couple of minor accidental gybes this year when inexperienced crew were helming.
I liked the idea of a boom brake but they seemed to be very expensive for reasonably simple items. I bought a climbing abseil figure of eight device and fixed it with a shackle onto the boom at the vang hanger. I then ran a line from the toe rail just forward of the mast, through the figure of eight, down to a block on the opposite toe rail and back to a spare deck mounted jamming cleat by the cockpit.
It works perfectly. Gybes now cause a slow, controlled boom movement with no need to sheet in and/or slow the boom by hand. I can vary the tension to suit wind conditions by hand or using the cockpit winch. Total cost was under £10 ( I already had the block and line).
Obviously my boat is light weight and the loads are low but I think that it would scale up to something a bit bigger reasonably well.
I liked the idea of a boom brake but they seemed to be very expensive for reasonably simple items. I bought a climbing abseil figure of eight device and fixed it with a shackle onto the boom at the vang hanger. I then ran a line from the toe rail just forward of the mast, through the figure of eight, down to a block on the opposite toe rail and back to a spare deck mounted jamming cleat by the cockpit.
It works perfectly. Gybes now cause a slow, controlled boom movement with no need to sheet in and/or slow the boom by hand. I can vary the tension to suit wind conditions by hand or using the cockpit winch. Total cost was under £10 ( I already had the block and line).
Obviously my boat is light weight and the loads are low but I think that it would scale up to something a bit bigger reasonably well.
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