Lakesailor
Well-Known Member
If you fall off it'll be at slow speed, into the drink. The boat will pop up again. Everyone seems to be designing a disaster scenario.
Hi all,
I have a Hurley 20 to which I want to fit the Barton lazy jack system. There are, in general, 2 choices - drop the rig, or go aloft. I haven't quite made my mind up, but want to know my choices anyway - is there such a thing as a rig that is too insubstantial to go aloft on? And is it mine..?
Cheers
Thanks to all.
The ladder of course might be easiest. I don't actually have one, but a stepladder on the quayside could be a go-er.
I'm live in Bristol. The boat is in portishead, where the quayside is probably at most 10'. The mast from the waterline is, by the look of it (thanks for the sailboat data link) 27' ish from the waterline, and the spreaders seem to be 2/3rds of the way, so say 18' from waterline, so minus quayside, plus stepladder, I'm likely to be in the right territory.
Nevertheless, I'm also interested in whether it is possible - if not for this, then for future reference. Thanks for ideas.
Lastly, on the 'homemade lazy jacks' - why can't they start from the spreaders rather than riveting the mast? What diameter of line is ideal? And why not just have one line from 2/3 along the boom going over a block at the spreader back to the boom at 1/3 of the way along?
The ladder of course might be easiest.
The physics of the ladder are also significantly different, because your weight is applied where you are and not at the top of the mast, as the case when using a halliard.
Ive been up the mast on my 22ft E-Boat. Its a slim mast too. I climbed up to the spreaders without a rope to rescue a flag halyard, just like climbing a pole!
If you have it entirely aboard (ie base on deck and top leaning against the mast) it achieves nothing as you will simply be at the height you are but probably already offset laterally which is a bit worse than being centred
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find a tall harbour wall and wait for the tide to go out
D
A friend broke his squib mast by parking it alongside the wall at lowestoft. He wanted to retrieve the spinny halliard
As he pulled the mast towards him the self righting of the keel did the opposite & the mast broke
Unfortunately he had borrowed the squib for the weekend & the owner was not amused
For planned maintenance like that, dropping the mast would be the simplest way to do the job.
A friend broke his squib mast by parking it alongside the wall at lowestoft. He wanted to retrieve the spinny halliard
As he pulled the mast towards him the self righting of the keel did the opposite & the mast broke
Unfortunately he had borrowed the squib for the weekend & the owner was not amused
(So to JDC's post i suggest he is not necessarily correct about strength of mast)
Some of our squibbers use ladders on the moorings in calm weather to get up to the spreaders. Non have fell in yet ( or if they have they have not admitted it!!!)
And of course this means any problem with the boat heeling results not in the harmless scenario described by LakeSailor but probably a 20' fall onto deck or concrete.
You can't fall on the deck as the reason you are falling off is that the boat has heeled. As it heels it reduces the height above the water (the jetty will be higher than the water anyway) If you hold on long enough you can step on to the jetty when you reach it.
Also why do people trust ladders more than masts?
Mainly because they are designed to support a man whilst leaning at an angle. A mast is designed to support column loads.
Baffles me. On the thread about enlarging a hole for a pin a theorist introduced insurance, warranty and all kinds of problems to thwart a simple mechanical solution.Why would a ladder, set up ahead or behind the mast, be in anyway offset laterally?
Lakey, myself and others here have actually used ladders. Why do the theorists seem to think its not possible?
When dropping the sail, if the lazy jacks are too low / too low an angle then the sail will flop over them rather than between them which is why it starts from about 3/2 up the mast. Cord diameter is 3 - 4 mm I think....Lastly, on the 'homemade lazy jacks' - why can't they start from the spreaders rather than riveting the mast? What diameter of line is ideal? And why not just have one line from 2/3 along the boom going over a block at the spreader back to the boom at 1/3 of the way along?