SimbaDog
Well-Known Member
I can't understand why nobody has posted the obvious simple answer? Send someone else up the mast, when the boat falls over you will have easy access to the top! :encouragement:
I can't understand why nobody has posted the obvious simple answer? Send someone else up the mast, when the boat falls over you will have easy access to the top! :encouragement:
or let the boat sink in 18 foot of water? Then attend to the mast top from the dinghy?
In the time this has been discussed I could have got to the top and affixed it...
BTW - RB_Stretch - your inbox is full and not taking messages..
I can't understand why nobody has posted the obvious simple answer? Send someone else up the mast, when the boat falls over you will have easy access to the top! :encouragement:
Tie the boat to the quay. Get an extending builders ladder. Put it up at the correct angle to the mast. gently climb up once the bottom of the ladder is lashed. Lash the top. Do the job. ??
Great minds think alike :encouragement:
Prompted by the mast climbing thread, I need to go up my mast to put on a windex. Problem is that my little 20 footer only has 300kg of internal ballast and a 30 foot mast, so if my 100kg goes up it will almost certainly topple over. As an experiment I thought maybe I could lean the boat over, so attached a halyard to the opposite side of a large pontoon and used the main winches. Expecting it to be easy I was surprised how tough it was and couldn't get the boat past 10 degrees or so. I suspect that any sideways pull on the mast sheaves is creating too much friction.
Has anyway tried similar? What did you use to pull the mast over?
See post #7If you can position the boat between 2 pontoons then run a halyard from each side of the mast to the pontoons each side that will prevent the boat toppling sideways. The halyards don't have to be right at the top of the mast. Y could even attach your 2 jib sheets to a single halyard attach the jib sheets to the 2 pontoons the tension them with the single halyard.
Tie the boat to the quay. Get an extending builders ladder. Put it up at the correct angle to the mast. gently climb up once the bottom of the ladder is lashed. Lash the top. Do the job. ??
Exactly what I did. 18 foot boat mast head rig, went up to sort out a jamming furler top bobbin.Great minds think alike :encouragement:
See post #7
.
The problem with that is it's asking for clashing rigs and quite possibly damage to anything on the smaller boats' masthead, at least.........