Daydream believer
Well-Known Member
I am afraid that i am going to argue with you here. What you are suggesting is due to wrong technique.what happens with single line reefing, even if one eases the halyard, is that the tack gets tight before the clew...,and then the whole thing binds up and you never get the clew satisfactorily tight because there is too much friction.
The only reliable way to avoid this is to reduce the friction by some combination of blocks, rings, and tapered dyneema reefing line.
by "tapered" i mean that you start with a double braid dyneema core line and strip the cover off so that you have uncovered dyneema in the areas prone to friction, but have cover remaining on the line where it goes to the clutch.
Your tapered lines are totally unnecessary. Actually, I doubt if it would work because the braided part would be so far through the system that it would still involve friction. then when easing off the thickened part would have to run back through the blocks & boom. Once reefed the length of line actually working on the reef is quite small , as can be seen by the large coil of rope at the clutch when reefed.
Of course friction should be addressed & i do not refute that. But tapered dynema reef lines on a yacht below 45 ft- no.
I suggested in my earlier post not letting lots of halyard going at once & that is part of the reason you cannot get a tight clew. As the reef comes near to its completion one stops off the halyard & keeps pulling in the reef line. The luff is restricted from dropping by the now locked halyard so the clew is automatically tightened& the boom raises up a little. Let the vang off at the start. Then over tighten the topping lift & take the weight off the clew. Once the clew is tight the last piece of luff can be hauled in & the halyard eased as one goes.
It takes a bit of practice but 2 attempts in light weather was all it took me. I have a 28m2 mainsail so no blocks inside the boom- which i would avoid at all costs - but that is another subject for deep debate.
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