Organiser servicing

frderek

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21 Aug 2013
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Hi,

I have these organisers on my coach-roof

IMG_0778.jpgIMG_0779.jpgIMG_0780.jpg

Can anyone identify them (there are no maker's marks) and advise how to go about servicing them? Several of the 'pulleys' (for want of a better term) are seized solid. I can't shift the 'screws' with any of my screwdrivers - indeed the it would require a very wide thin blade with one hell of a good handle, I suspect. How are they attached to the roof?

many tia

Derek
 
Spinlock i think.
remove them ( backing plates + nuts on the underside ) but i think that the sheaves are captive .
i give mine a careful squirt of silicone with the extension tube on the nozzle. dont spray silicone everywhere, paint & silicone dont get on at all well
 
As sailorman said, there are likely to be nuts inside the boat. If you can't free the sheaves with lubricant, it's probably best to replace the organisers - get ball bearing sheaves next time!
 
As sailorman said, there are likely to be nuts inside the boat. If you can't free the sheaves with lubricant, it's probably best to replace the organisers - get ball bearing sheaves next time!
I suspect these are the original Westerly fittings as the GRP is moulded to fit them IYSWIM :)
 
I managed to free mine using warm water (a lot) and putting a tourniquet of rope round them, working to and fro until they moved freely. Quick squirt of your preferred lubricant and you're done.
Merry Christmas.
 
I managed to free mine using warm water (a lot) and putting a tourniquet of rope round them, working to and fro until they moved freely. Quick squirt of your preferred lubricant and you're done.
Merry Christmas.

Thanks for that, sounds good. In situ or did you remove them to soak them in warm water?
 
Whilst you can free them up for a season or so they always seem to seize again. I finally replaced mine with Harken ball-bearing ones as a double-decker (I've 14 ropes coming back to the cockpit).
Reducing the friction had a remarkable effect on how easy it became to operate the control lines (all except the main halyard).
 
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