Thanks for the advice, Brian! Boats in the water and I’m just starting to acclimate myself to it, haven’t sailed yet! I have a question for you about attaching the mast, and maybe I should start a different thread but I’ll just ask here first.I love mine. I use hank on 110% jib. She sails best on a reach, and in light air I can beat Catalina 22s and Beneteau First 235 off the wind. She doesn't point too terribly well compared to some boat, but well enough. There are a couple others 192s on our lake, and I can walk away from most, including one set up with a furling 135% genoa. I don't want to bother putting sail track down the side decks, so I just keep on with my 110%. Some track on the cabin top would help with jib twist. I wish it had a traveller, but the only real option is a custom transom mount bridge over the tiller, which would make climbing in on the swim ladder more difficult. Mine points higher on port tack because the boom gets pulled slightly more to port by the offset backstay. I rigged an adjustable topping lift so I can vang sheet, and sometimes in light air I will get twist set between topping lift and vang, and then pull the boom slightly over the centerline as if I had a traveler, in order to point a few degrees higher, say to clear a headland without having to throw in an extra tack. I've slept and cooked on mine plenty with a 1 burner butane stove like they use for buffet omelets, and a SS grill I clamp in a janky way to the aft cockpit handles. I love my little 192.
The directions on the original manual (which I have) say “put the gooseneck into the gooseneck fitting on the mast.” This part is simple. But, once you do this, the boom just slide to the bottom of the mast, and there’s no way to secure it to the mast. The next direction is “attach with the provided bolt.” Very vague, and there’s no bolt in sight. Then it says “secure the aft end of the boom to the toppinglift pigtail on the backstay.” Which makes sense, simple. But now the boom is sitting in a position where the aft end of the boom is higher up than the forward end, which is just resting at the bottom of the mast.
I spoke with the PO and he told me that there’s no more pieces to secure the boom to the mast, I just have to attach the mainsail and once I raise the sail, it raises the boom, and I tighten and cleat the downhaul and the boom is now lifted and evenly in place. Does this sound right to you? This may be a silly question, it just seems odd that when the sails are down the boom would rest at the bottom of the mast, and the photos in the manual don’t look like that.
Any O’day 192 owners, feel free to chime in! Thank you all so much for your help!!