neil_s
Well-Known Member
You can do it! Only took me sixteen years to summon up the nerve to have a try!
^click for video
This is me helming my Fireball GBR14474...notice how the twinner is holding the kite pole just off the forestay, and the crew is well back just playing the sheet? The line going from the end of pole to the mast base is the pole downhaul to stop the pole "skying"
Shock cord isn't a good idea for the uphaul...a boat will stop with the pole attached to the mast at one end and the other in the water... Trust me on this.
There are many permutations, what works best varies.
There are endless variations. A look around the Merlins and 505's is instructional. Or bewildering!
If those cleats were just for the twinning lines, there would have been no need to raise them on blocks. But people do all sorts of odd things, including not finishing fitting out before the next race and leaving it like that until the boat is sold.The position of those twinning line fairleads does seem to suggest the tail should head aft to the cleat on the sidedeck, rather than inboard. On the other hand the cleat looks pretty oversize for twinners.......
If those cleats were just for the twinning lines, there would have been no need to raise them on blocks.
Anoccasionalyachtsman...erm...no boat sails with the pole on the forestay all the time, it just depends which was you are pointing the aforementioned boat! On a tight reach, pole forward...on a run, pole back...broad reach, somewhere between the two!
One advantage of the bobble system is that you always pull the twinner in all the way, and if the reach tightens up halfway along the crew can just ping the guy out the top of the reaching cleat and the pole goes forward to it's preset position just off the pole.
Oh, and 95% or so of Fireballs built in the last 20 years have bags not chutes and the twinner system so it's perfect for boats with kite bags at the mast. In actual fact the only Fireballs I've seen in 18 years of racing them that do not have twinning lines will be very old floppy 1980s GRP Rondars that don't actually race anyway, or 60s restoration jobs where the owner is restoring towards originality not useability.