cliffordpope
Well-Known Member
Hello,
I'm a new member here, having only just found this wonderful forum.
I have been rebuilding an ancient gaff cutter for about 10 years now, mostly in the evenings. I am now at the stage of doing the rigging, and have a number of questions all to do with clearance between rigging and moving spars:
1) Throat and peak halliards. These originally led down to sheeves on the tabernacle, and then back to the cockpit. The upper blocks hang on boltsters on the aft face of the mast, exactly as per the standard books. But the downhaul then fouls the gaff crutch, especially as it swings round. Everything I read simply describes the halliards as belaying at the foot of the mast, or for easy sailing, running along the coach roof. I have looked at other boats, and cannot see how they manage to avoid this problem.
All I can think of is either taking the downhauls down at an angle, to blocks at the corner of the coach roof, or via another block hanging from underneath the crosstrees. I don't see other boats rigged like this though.
2) Forestay etc clearing top mast. John Leather shows the forestay having a long bight, hooked round the lower mast, wide enough so as not to pinch the top mast. That seems OK, but the bight has to be quite long.
Similarly, the strop for the staysail halliard block. But the length of bight necessary would put the block about 2' or more away from the mast. That puts the halliard pull at an angle, which would spoil the set of the top of the sail because it hanks on the forestay, .and also would limit the height of the sail.
The same consideration applies to the jib halliard block. I want to set the jib flying, on a traveller on the bowsprit with Wykeham-Martin furler. This seems to work quite well, apart again from the arrangement at the top.
I am wondering about using a strop of wire with a span shackle to spread the width at the forward end.
3) Top mast forestay. How should this attach to the end of the bowsprit? Should its length be pre-set, so that when the bowsprit is run out it exactly takes up the right tension? That might make it difficult to get the pin through the bitts. Or should it have a tackle on the end? Or be of flexible wire and lead back to deck via a pulley on the end of the bowsprit?
4) Backstay runners. Is it normal to have separate main and topmast backstays, or can these be combined part-way up?
5) The double topping lifts join on the downhaul on the mast, and a single rope then leads back along to the cockpit. I am considering adding another split, like a lazyjack, to improve control of the sail as it is lowered (boom overhangs the counter by about 2'). Are these just knotted, or do they have little blocks or bullseyes of some sort to distribute the weight?
Many thanks if anyone can make any suggestions.
I'm a new member here, having only just found this wonderful forum.
I have been rebuilding an ancient gaff cutter for about 10 years now, mostly in the evenings. I am now at the stage of doing the rigging, and have a number of questions all to do with clearance between rigging and moving spars:
1) Throat and peak halliards. These originally led down to sheeves on the tabernacle, and then back to the cockpit. The upper blocks hang on boltsters on the aft face of the mast, exactly as per the standard books. But the downhaul then fouls the gaff crutch, especially as it swings round. Everything I read simply describes the halliards as belaying at the foot of the mast, or for easy sailing, running along the coach roof. I have looked at other boats, and cannot see how they manage to avoid this problem.
All I can think of is either taking the downhauls down at an angle, to blocks at the corner of the coach roof, or via another block hanging from underneath the crosstrees. I don't see other boats rigged like this though.
2) Forestay etc clearing top mast. John Leather shows the forestay having a long bight, hooked round the lower mast, wide enough so as not to pinch the top mast. That seems OK, but the bight has to be quite long.
Similarly, the strop for the staysail halliard block. But the length of bight necessary would put the block about 2' or more away from the mast. That puts the halliard pull at an angle, which would spoil the set of the top of the sail because it hanks on the forestay, .and also would limit the height of the sail.
The same consideration applies to the jib halliard block. I want to set the jib flying, on a traveller on the bowsprit with Wykeham-Martin furler. This seems to work quite well, apart again from the arrangement at the top.
I am wondering about using a strop of wire with a span shackle to spread the width at the forward end.
3) Top mast forestay. How should this attach to the end of the bowsprit? Should its length be pre-set, so that when the bowsprit is run out it exactly takes up the right tension? That might make it difficult to get the pin through the bitts. Or should it have a tackle on the end? Or be of flexible wire and lead back to deck via a pulley on the end of the bowsprit?
4) Backstay runners. Is it normal to have separate main and topmast backstays, or can these be combined part-way up?
5) The double topping lifts join on the downhaul on the mast, and a single rope then leads back along to the cockpit. I am considering adding another split, like a lazyjack, to improve control of the sail as it is lowered (boom overhangs the counter by about 2'). Are these just knotted, or do they have little blocks or bullseyes of some sort to distribute the weight?
Many thanks if anyone can make any suggestions.