zoidberg
Well-known member
As part of my refurb'ing of a tough ould Cutlass27, I'm fitting an inner stay on which to hang a 'Solent' jib on a furling foil for brisk breezes. I reckon this will be about 95%-100% of the inner foretriangle, and I'm told by sailmakers it's 'up to me.'
I'm now thinking about where provision should be made for sheeting of this furling/reefing jib. There are no conventional tracks on the coachroof - the original design had but one headstay, and simple tracks just inboard from the toerail.
There ARE a pair of deckeyes on the coachroof each side, bolted through at ~293cm and ~315cm respectively from the new tack point, and 43/55cm off the centreline. The mastfoot is 250cm from that tackpoint.
That gives notional sheeting 'angles' of ~8 amd ~10 degrees respectively.
I could clip sheaveblocks onto those deckeyes, or some arrangement with Low Friction Rings.
I could even fit short transverse tracks - I have the track and cars spare - but perhaps wouldn't want to do that until I had 'pinned down' the sail dimensions and sheeting requirements.
What does the 'hive mind' think about creative use of those existing deckeyes?
I'm now thinking about where provision should be made for sheeting of this furling/reefing jib. There are no conventional tracks on the coachroof - the original design had but one headstay, and simple tracks just inboard from the toerail.
There ARE a pair of deckeyes on the coachroof each side, bolted through at ~293cm and ~315cm respectively from the new tack point, and 43/55cm off the centreline. The mastfoot is 250cm from that tackpoint.
That gives notional sheeting 'angles' of ~8 amd ~10 degrees respectively.
I could clip sheaveblocks onto those deckeyes, or some arrangement with Low Friction Rings.
I could even fit short transverse tracks - I have the track and cars spare - but perhaps wouldn't want to do that until I had 'pinned down' the sail dimensions and sheeting requirements.
What does the 'hive mind' think about creative use of those existing deckeyes?