prv
Well-Known Member
And only anti for my 26-footer. On a bigger boat I would certainly have one. It wold be interesting to know what size of boat the "for" voters have
34 foot here. Fitted a new stackpack along with the new sails when we bought her, so haven't sailed this boat without. (She did have lazy jacks and stackpack before as well; they were UV-damaged and ripped so got replaced.) Works pretty well provided you take a little care not to catch the first batten on the way up - once that's past, the others never catch. Does mean only hoisting dead into wind, but the batten cars tend to mandate that anyway. Also no longer falls all the way under its own weight - probably needs some dry lube on the sliders.
Previous boat was 24 foot. Included a stackpack among the big pile of no-longer-used canvas items - the previous owner had taken it off which supports your view about small boats. She was gaff-rigged though, which means the upper part of the sail is already controlled by being laced to the gaff, and you also have twin topping lifts which come down either side of the sail and work like rudimentary lazy jacks. You still need to manually stow the sail, but until you do it's kept under some semblance of control rather than falling all over the deck.
As for tips for improving yours - I don't know about the way down as I don't understand what's catching there, but I can think of two for less catching on the way up. Firstly, if you move the upper ends of the lazyjacks out along the spreaders a way, you get a wider "channel" for the sail to go up in. Secondly, try re-jigging the branching of the lines so that it only spreads out towards the end of the boom right at the bottom. Probably a **** way to describe it, but I'm thinking more like an asymptote rather than a straight line from max Y to max X. That way the ends of the battens (except perhaps the top one) are aft of the lines for most of the way up and can't catch on them.
Pete