BruceDanforth
Well-Known Member
Your pdf reader has probably crashed.
Your pdf reader has probably crashed.
Far easier if the bottlescrew is fitted to the sideplates a couple of holes up with a bolt and nyloc nut. You then only have the sideplates to manoeuvre over the stemhead fitting.
That puts all the forestay tension into only the sideplates, which are diminished in width by the holes.
They don't look like as strong as the rest of the forestay, and the distance between them would put a bending load on the bottom pin, not the sheer load its designed for, so I dont think it's supposed to be like that.
That puts all the forestay tension into only the sideplates, which are diminished in width by the holes.
They don't look like as strong as the rest of the forestay, and the distance between them would put a bending load on the bottom pin, not the sheer load its designed for, so I dont think it's supposed to be like that.
That is how it is shown in the instructions surely?
Not that I recall when I fitted a 406s it to my first boat. the side plates are there to position the drum height and take the halyard tension, not to take the forestay tension, so the pin had to go through all of it, hence the PITA.
Maybe someone still has the instructions?
http://www.bluemoment.com/manuals/plastimo_s_series_roller_reefing.pdf
Not explicitly stated , in fact very ambiguous.
From what you say I think you have a rotostay system. It uses it's own genoa halyard and you DO NOT use the one on your boat as it will wrap around the foil. The Rotostay halyard goes up around a spigot wheel which is part of the top swivel assemble, and then comes back down the foil to lock off at the bottom. Instructions, from the Catalac site, follow.
http://www.catamaransite.com/rotostay_furler.html
Take a look at the diagrams on page 13. Clearly shows 2 different clevis pins/bolts in use through the sidestays.