charles_reed
Well-Known Member
Think he's referring to chromed alloy - not the original chromed bronze.I've never heard that and sailed with chrome Lewmars for over 25 years.
Think he's referring to chromed alloy - not the original chromed bronze.I've never heard that and sailed with chrome Lewmars for over 25 years.
Think he's referring to chromed alloy - not the original chromed bronze.
An instructor friend of mine who sails on lots of new school boats (including the Sunsail 40s) says the new Harkens slip unless you have lots of turns on.
I have all Lewmar CST winches on my cruisng yacht. I race also on another boat that has Harken and makes me wish I had Harkens. The reason is that with Harkens you can preload the winch and self-tail then pull the slack sheet in by hand easily before starting to winch in with the handle when it gets harder. With Lewmar CST instead this isn't quite possible because once the genoa sheet is jammed into the ST jaws it cannot be pulled as easily so with Lewmar CST one can only pre-load the winch (not the self tailer), sheet in by hand, load the self tailer, fit the winch handle and now winch in the sheet.
To take load without slipping my Harkens need so many turns on the drum that trying to pull them in quickly for a smart tack fully loaded is a surefire recipe for riding turns.
Harken's Radial winches (introduced a couple of years ago) seem not to have been the great improvement they were supposed to be. Harken have (quietly) introduced the Performa range, without the big cutouts on the drum.
http://www.harken.com/press/Harken-Performa_Winch.php