Whitelighter
Well-Known Member
Could you not adapt the type of tracks that are used on yachts for the Genoa/Spin cars on the side decks.
I forget the technical name.
I forget the technical name.
Thanks
I didn't expect replies that quickly.
Nick and MAPISM -
.
Nick, I gotta disagree a bit I think. Those genoa cars will struggle with the loads we are talking about, not in the sense of busting but in the sense of not providing a friction-free sliding action when loaded. Their rated capacities are not telling you that there is easy friction free sliding when loaded. Furthermore they are absolutely not designed to provide enough limitation in the car rotating around an axis parallel to the direction of slide. That means the top of a 180mm high chock is going to be wobbly/floppy more than you'd like (yuk!)Before going too complicated I'd definitely see what can be done with standard track.
Fix two sections of track like this to the flybridge deck
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Then on each section of track, have two simple cars like this 12-18" apart, remove the U-bolts, and bridge them with a stainless profile that will accommodate the chocks.
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Better still, make one of the cars locking so that the chocks will be securely held in either position
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Precisely, but I can't think of a way to keep it simple/easy/smooth, with the tracks+sliding cars solution.The trick would be to make it a really simple construction.
Where you have a big panel sliding on those tracks, and a track at each end or each side, more than a metre apart, it's fine. But here we are trying to slide a single chock along a single track, without the ugliness of a pair of tracks spaced well apart. The top face of chock - 180mm high - is going to wobble in a direction perpendicular to the track because genoa cars are not designed to eliminate rotation of the car along an axis parallel to the trackThere was a grand design where a glass roof section were mounted on Harken Cars and Genoa Tracks and it appeared to move very smoothly. When they did one of the few years on catch up it was still going great guns.
Good point, if that is the case my thoughts re. lifting the tender is flawed, but maybe it's still not a big deal to just push the tender bow towards the stern a bit, before operating the crane...Mapis, you have to remember that the crane must be exactly athwartships when the dinghy is stowed, and cannot be slewed at all until AFTER the dinghy is in the "300mm astern" position ready for launching the dinghy (I think!)
Nick, I gotta disagree a bit I think. Those genoa cars will struggle with the loads we are talking about, not in the sense of busting but in the sense of not providing a friction-free sliding action when loaded. Their rated capacities are not telling you that there is easy friction free sliding when loaded. Furthermore they are absolutely not designed to provide enough limitation in the car rotating around an axis parallel to the direction of slide. That means the top of a 180mm high chock is going to be wobbly/floppy more than you'd like (yuk!)