Praxinoscope
Well-Known Member
Further to my thread on Gibbs RA winches last year, I can now report a partial uccess in servicing these seemingly rather rare winches. I have gone as far as possible without removing them from the boat, so haven't managed to access the lowest gear wheels, as these last items an only be accessed by removing the winches entirely , and as usual on boats this is not an easy option.
Thanks to advice from Neil-S concerning the S/S rod tat goes through the central column and which prevents disassembly I persevered with 'drifting' this rod out by tapping it out with a parallel drift and medium size ball pein hammer.
I have taken photo's of the various stages of disassembly so if anyone else needs to see what they will find if they want to service this model winch I will download them.
They are not the simplest winches to service, and were obviously complex and expensive to manufacture, which may explain why there don't seem to be many of them around.
What is interesting however is that these winches are now over 40 years old, from the state of them when I got them apart, I don't think they hadn't been serviced possibly since new, just grease stuffed in now and again, but there is virtually now sign of wear so quality of construction was good, but it does raise the question as to why a manufacturer would make an item that needs regular servicing so difficult to service.
If anyone has these winches and would like a set of images of the various components and some notes on the difficulty of stripping them down please ask.
Thanks to advice from Neil-S concerning the S/S rod tat goes through the central column and which prevents disassembly I persevered with 'drifting' this rod out by tapping it out with a parallel drift and medium size ball pein hammer.
I have taken photo's of the various stages of disassembly so if anyone else needs to see what they will find if they want to service this model winch I will download them.
They are not the simplest winches to service, and were obviously complex and expensive to manufacture, which may explain why there don't seem to be many of them around.
What is interesting however is that these winches are now over 40 years old, from the state of them when I got them apart, I don't think they hadn't been serviced possibly since new, just grease stuffed in now and again, but there is virtually now sign of wear so quality of construction was good, but it does raise the question as to why a manufacturer would make an item that needs regular servicing so difficult to service.
If anyone has these winches and would like a set of images of the various components and some notes on the difficulty of stripping them down please ask.