steve yates
Well-Known Member
2 issues I'm looking for help with, possibly related. I've put the mast back up on my bradwell 18, and the cap shrouds can't be tightened enough. The rigging has swaged terminal for a bottle screw, and the bottle screws did have bent forks at the other end, so I chucked them. Now I cant remember if they were shorter than the new ones I replaced them with. It is a masthead rig with cap shrouds and lowers, the lowers I can get some tension but the bottle screws are closed up, so no more room to improve.
I'm a bit stumped as to why as the same rigging seems to have changed lengths! Which leads me to the forestay, possibly if I sort this the rest may fall into place, or not?
Its a furler, (plastic, problem plastimo or something)and it's always had a bit of sag in it, not to mention being attached with a toggle and a shackle. The backstay splits low down and both ends went to shackles at the stern.
I have got rid of the shackles for toggles, and managed to get the forestay attaching to a single toggle on the stemhead. There is a bottle screw between two prongs, and then some kind of aluminium plates screwed through the centre of the bottleswcrew and the toggle forks, which I don't really understand. Is it to prevent the spinning of the furler unwinding the bottlescrew?
My problem is, I tensioned the bottle screw up to get rid of the sag, and the two plates dont marry up now. I got some good tension further out on the stemhead but the plates phyysically didnt fit to put back in place, so I had to move it back again, and then just join the end of the plates to themselves, as I couldn't align through the toggle forks. The two pics might make it clearer. The first is as it was, the second how it is now.
So my questions are, should the forestay be taught? Are those aluminium plates really required or is the bottle screw sufficient in itself? Can I use the backstay to put the tension into the forestay and remove the sag? as I have a fair bit of bottle screw left to play with there, or will that just bend the mast back?
Thanks
I'm a bit stumped as to why as the same rigging seems to have changed lengths! Which leads me to the forestay, possibly if I sort this the rest may fall into place, or not?
Its a furler, (plastic, problem plastimo or something)and it's always had a bit of sag in it, not to mention being attached with a toggle and a shackle. The backstay splits low down and both ends went to shackles at the stern.
I have got rid of the shackles for toggles, and managed to get the forestay attaching to a single toggle on the stemhead. There is a bottle screw between two prongs, and then some kind of aluminium plates screwed through the centre of the bottleswcrew and the toggle forks, which I don't really understand. Is it to prevent the spinning of the furler unwinding the bottlescrew?
My problem is, I tensioned the bottle screw up to get rid of the sag, and the two plates dont marry up now. I got some good tension further out on the stemhead but the plates phyysically didnt fit to put back in place, so I had to move it back again, and then just join the end of the plates to themselves, as I couldn't align through the toggle forks. The two pics might make it clearer. The first is as it was, the second how it is now.
So my questions are, should the forestay be taught? Are those aluminium plates really required or is the bottle screw sufficient in itself? Can I use the backstay to put the tension into the forestay and remove the sag? as I have a fair bit of bottle screw left to play with there, or will that just bend the mast back?
Thanks