Daydream believer
Well-Known Member
10mm on my 31 - less friction.(p.s. Isn't 14 to 16mm genoa sheeting rather big and bulky for a 31 footer?)
10mm on my 31 - less friction.(p.s. Isn't 14 to 16mm genoa sheeting rather big and bulky for a 31 footer?)
With due respects-- Should sheets be rigged so that they are allowed to fray in the first place?I’m not a fan of single piece sheet as I once had one fray and then snap
That's no been my experience. The genny came off the boat last summer as the mast was down and had not moved a mm. Then the sail is next off the mast, 2021, I expect the same.I would not recc'd Cow Hitch to the genny ... over time you are liable to have it slip or become unequal.
Equally, checking your gear ensures no frayed sheet ever gets close to snapping...I’m not a fan of single piece sheet as I once had one fray and then snap in 35 knots leaving a heavily reefed Genoa with no means of controlling it and an eye too high to reach even standing on tbe pulpit (which I shouldn’t have done).
Two sheets means you can never lose control that way.
Absolutely agree. Tried all sorts to get around the baby stay snarl up problem and this has proven to be the best solution so far coupled with good tacking technique to get the foresail through the gap handsomely.
With due respects-- Should sheets be rigged so that they are allowed to fray in the first place?
I am not baiting you in particular- so please do not bite-- it was just that your comment prompted me-----
I often help lay up boats at our club & it amazes me how poorly people have their sheets etc rigged. Bits of string tied hap haphazardly all over the place with awful knots, frayed unwhipped ends & friction making life so hard. Pullies stuck with salt & winches barely able to turn.
Already in this post forumites explain that they have problems tacking. That would be something that I would want to solve very early on. Leaving a sail so long that it needs the wind to pull it round (as suggested in one post above) just means hard work sheeting it in after the sail is clear- does it not?
Just spoils the sailing experience .
If you look at my photo you will see that the knot is outside the sheets and soft shackle. There is no possibility of the knot catching the babystay. Having tried just about every possibility over many years I assure you that spliced sheets and a soft shackle is by far the most slippery arangement.See the current thread
'Thanks Neeves - made new snubber', Post No 2
We have been using the sheet for maybe 10 years now - no issues. It is, they are, a dyneema sheet, with the dyneema joint. We have 2 sheets constructed this was for our 150% genoa and our screecher (sort of Code Zero).
Jonathan
We have used cow hitch for years, never slipped - quite the opposite. I don't quite see the point of soft shackles in this application. The knot is something else to get hung up, and you are adding something extra to go wrong. But if it works for you - go for it. Most applications are similar - but unique.
I appreciate and understand your use and reasoning ....
Personally I wouldn't use as I don't trust a hitch never designed for loads. Only place it definitely has a use - as a hitch at start of a chain stopper on wire ... to avoid a lock up of the chain when removing.