dom
Well-Known Member
I suffered the dreaded halyard wrap entering Cowes a few weeks ago - so emergency gybe and back into Solent to sort. I could see with the binos that the halyard ( I have a halyard deflector) had not wrapped around the forestay, so down came the genny and back into Cowes. A whizz up the mast found the forestay in perfect condition. I found that the halyard swivel rotated beautifully when not under tension, but became stiff as a you like under tension (tested with strop to drum).
I asked a rigger to have a look and he informed me: (i) that the Facnor halyard swivel is not serviceable, (ii) that the problem arose from the inadequate ball bearings used by Facnor, (iii) that the furler should not be rotated under full halyard tension and (iv) that the main drum typically failed soon after the halyard swivel. He quoted for an entire new system (big bucks from a different manufacturer).
So I called a Facnor agent in France who I know well. He told me that it is very important to rinse out halyard swivel at least twice a year and more often if there is a lot of building dust around. He also told me that the system is specifically designed (indeed required by the VOR 70 fleet) to be operated under high tension. I admitted that I had forgotten to do this for the past few years, but he said don't worry, do the following and call back:
I asked a rigger to have a look and he informed me: (i) that the Facnor halyard swivel is not serviceable, (ii) that the problem arose from the inadequate ball bearings used by Facnor, (iii) that the furler should not be rotated under full halyard tension and (iv) that the main drum typically failed soon after the halyard swivel. He quoted for an entire new system (big bucks from a different manufacturer).
So I called a Facnor agent in France who I know well. He told me that it is very important to rinse out halyard swivel at least twice a year and more often if there is a lot of building dust around. He also told me that the system is specifically designed (indeed required by the VOR 70 fleet) to be operated under high tension. I admitted that I had forgotten to do this for the past few years, but he said don't worry, do the following and call back:
- Rinse the swivel through with a running hose for about half an hour giving the swivel a really good aggressive shake and a spin every few minutes
- Squirt in some WD40 Silicone Lube and spin the swivel, then load it and some more, then more WD40 Silicone Lube and more spinning.
- Flush again with water and then add more Lube!
Last edited:
