macd
Well-Known Member
It's called a "feeder arm" (Lewmar), or "self-tailing arm", (Harken, Andersen), or "pain in the back" (pyrojames).
Harken installation manual:
"Position the self-tailing arm so that the line leaving the winch is led into the cockpit", just as Little Grebe wrote.
Andersen have a slightly different take, recommending that genoa/spinnaker winch arms are positioned inboard, but within an arc 45degrees forward of abeam for starboard winches, 45degrees aft for port winches.
I seem to remember that Lewmar have a slightly different take to both, but their website's so damn clunky it's hard to find out. Definitely inboard, though. I do recall from installing a pair of Lewmars a decade ago that they're very clear that a gear on the base should be orientated in a particular way relative to the incoming sheet, but this has nothing to do with feeder arm position.
Harken installation manual:
"Position the self-tailing arm so that the line leaving the winch is led into the cockpit", just as Little Grebe wrote.
Andersen have a slightly different take, recommending that genoa/spinnaker winch arms are positioned inboard, but within an arc 45degrees forward of abeam for starboard winches, 45degrees aft for port winches.
I seem to remember that Lewmar have a slightly different take to both, but their website's so damn clunky it's hard to find out. Definitely inboard, though. I do recall from installing a pair of Lewmars a decade ago that they're very clear that a gear on the base should be orientated in a particular way relative to the incoming sheet, but this has nothing to do with feeder arm position.
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