youen
Well-Known Member
I had to dismantle my Selden end boom to change one reefing line and found I have lost severals wheels of the moving parts fitted inside the boom,is that quite usual and what can be done to avoid this problem.Thanks
Lower the boom and flush with a hose. Good idea to do this anyway.... The wheels are probably still inside the boom somewhere - all you have to do is take the boom off, hold it vertical and shake it. Or send in a well trained hamster.
How is that little pearl going to help the OP who wants to know how to repair his Selden boom, which incidentally is the same as thousands of others?For the OP's problem, I'd think nowadays the only in-boom sheave & line might be the clew outhaul, the rest like reefing lines are best external, ideally using ball bearing cheek blocks as friction is a major snag when leading lines through several 90 degree turns.
I had to dismantle my Selden end boom to change one reefing line and found I have lost severals wheels of the moving parts fitted inside the boom,is that quite usual and what can be done to avoid this problem.Thanks
Not sure what your comment relates to. On my boat I just undid four torx bolts so that I could lubricate the system.one needs to drill the rivets off one end to remove it and get the bits out and do it properly, not difficult.
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I have just spoken to a lovely lady from Martin Leaning in Port Solent
http://www.masts-and-rigging.co.uk/Contact-Us.aspx
She was on a train coming back from the boat show
They have the wheels in stock and I can either collect them for you and post them or she has said she will post direct to you ... just not sure how you pay.
Perhaps either call or email them on Monday or pm me.
Sorry Youen, can't think of an answer. Your Rassy boom is presumably different to my Bav boom.
The sliding cars sit in tracks either side of the boom and it is impossible for the wheels to fall out. They are almost an interference fit.
Keeping the lines under tension surely means that you are in effect starting the reefing process which means the leech of the sail would be under tension... we have ours loose.
Good luck.
I'm not really impressed with the setup Selden made.