Cardo
Well-Known Member
You'll all need to forgive my newbieness but I am still very much at the learning stage!
So yesterday we sailed downwind from Lymington back to the Hamble. The trip was rather pleasant and I was able to play around with rigging up preventers, playing with the whisker pole, etc.
However, I hit a bit of a snag when we arrived in Southampton Water and I tried to furl the genoa. The bugger furled around a foot or so but then would not go any further in for love nor money. It didn't help that the wind was picking up and starting to gust over 20 knots (yeah, ok, maybe not that much, but it gets a tad hairy when you're not that experienced!
).
After busting a gut giving the winch all I had I realised it wasn't going to work.
I ended up realising the furling line had managed to jam itself in the furler and winching had only tightened this up. So I let all of the genoa out again and had SWMBO sail us along whilst I unjammed the furling line. Once this had been sorted, the genoa rolled away easily.
It would appear when the genoa was let out in the first place, the furling line instead of being fed out was left to run loose and had not rolled up neatly in the furler.
So, the reason for this thread it this: Can you give any advice on how to deal with this?
Is there a better way to deal with this kind of problem?
In our case, the wind wasn't so strong that we couldn't simply sail along with the full genoa out whilst sorting it out. What if the wind had been blowing 30+? There was no way of unjamming the furling line without unrolling all of the genoa and taking the tension off the line.
At least we managed to sort it without any damage and got back ok. So I still call it a successful day out
So yesterday we sailed downwind from Lymington back to the Hamble. The trip was rather pleasant and I was able to play around with rigging up preventers, playing with the whisker pole, etc.
However, I hit a bit of a snag when we arrived in Southampton Water and I tried to furl the genoa. The bugger furled around a foot or so but then would not go any further in for love nor money. It didn't help that the wind was picking up and starting to gust over 20 knots (yeah, ok, maybe not that much, but it gets a tad hairy when you're not that experienced!
After busting a gut giving the winch all I had I realised it wasn't going to work.
I ended up realising the furling line had managed to jam itself in the furler and winching had only tightened this up. So I let all of the genoa out again and had SWMBO sail us along whilst I unjammed the furling line. Once this had been sorted, the genoa rolled away easily.
It would appear when the genoa was let out in the first place, the furling line instead of being fed out was left to run loose and had not rolled up neatly in the furler.
So, the reason for this thread it this: Can you give any advice on how to deal with this?
Is there a better way to deal with this kind of problem?
In our case, the wind wasn't so strong that we couldn't simply sail along with the full genoa out whilst sorting it out. What if the wind had been blowing 30+? There was no way of unjamming the furling line without unrolling all of the genoa and taking the tension off the line.
At least we managed to sort it without any damage and got back ok. So I still call it a successful day out