I was having problems deploying and furling my in mast main on our 2002 386 since we purchased her last year. The boat only had 400 hours but also had it's original sails. The sail would come out with some effort but going back in was 15 min of hard winching with breaks to catch my breath.
I recently replaced almost all of the running rigging myself, installed a new main sail and lubed the bearings in the mast. The sail came out easier in under a minute but I still needed to use the winch as pulling it out by hand was not quite as easy as I had hopped.
I started to use the continuous loop to furl in the main with a winch but it was back to cranking again. It was not as hard as before, but not what I had hoped.
An retired fellow hunter owner at my marina with much more experience than I, takes people out a few times a day on 3 hour sailing trips as a business. He advised me to furl in the main with the winch on the base of the mast and not with the continuous loop. Wow what a difference. I got the main in in less than a minute and it was very easy.
I am now wondering if the rollers under the deck cowling are one of my next friction issues to deal with. My boat has a white plastic horizontal roller bar near the mast then flat roller wheels next in line guiding the lines to my cockpit area.
Are replacements easily available or is it even worth replacing?
I have read where some have run their lines over the deck to avoid the friction caused by these rollers.
I noticed the white plastic roller bar has worn notches in the plastic from the lines and I am not sure of the condition of the other roller wheels that are next in the path from the mast to the cockpit.
I recently replaced almost all of the running rigging myself, installed a new main sail and lubed the bearings in the mast. The sail came out easier in under a minute but I still needed to use the winch as pulling it out by hand was not quite as easy as I had hopped.
I started to use the continuous loop to furl in the main with a winch but it was back to cranking again. It was not as hard as before, but not what I had hoped.
An retired fellow hunter owner at my marina with much more experience than I, takes people out a few times a day on 3 hour sailing trips as a business. He advised me to furl in the main with the winch on the base of the mast and not with the continuous loop. Wow what a difference. I got the main in in less than a minute and it was very easy.
I am now wondering if the rollers under the deck cowling are one of my next friction issues to deal with. My boat has a white plastic horizontal roller bar near the mast then flat roller wheels next in line guiding the lines to my cockpit area.
Are replacements easily available or is it even worth replacing?
I have read where some have run their lines over the deck to avoid the friction caused by these rollers.
I noticed the white plastic roller bar has worn notches in the plastic from the lines and I am not sure of the condition of the other roller wheels that are next in the path from the mast to the cockpit.
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