mike_k
Well-Known Member
I was out on my 23-footer last weekend in Southampton Water when the forestay with roller furling snapped at the top of the mast with the genoa fully rolled out.
Fortunately, the mast stayed up and we were able to get the main down and genoa rolled in VERY quickly - while trying not to panic /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
Was I lucky in that the mast stayed up, or is the positioning of the side stays to do with it ? The mast is deck stepped on a tabernacle.
The side stays didn't seem any slacker or tighter than usual, and I left the genoa halyard up to give some support, although that was very saggy. The backstays have always been a bit slack - something being fixed with the new rigging being done at the moment.
Would a snapped forestay always cause a mast to come down or like most things in life - does it depend on many different factors ?
Fortunately, the mast stayed up and we were able to get the main down and genoa rolled in VERY quickly - while trying not to panic /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
Was I lucky in that the mast stayed up, or is the positioning of the side stays to do with it ? The mast is deck stepped on a tabernacle.
The side stays didn't seem any slacker or tighter than usual, and I left the genoa halyard up to give some support, although that was very saggy. The backstays have always been a bit slack - something being fixed with the new rigging being done at the moment.
Would a snapped forestay always cause a mast to come down or like most things in life - does it depend on many different factors ?