I've owned many O'Day boats, from the classic daysailor, the 192, 20, 222, and 27. Currently I'm sailing the 222. The mainsheet arrangement is totally unsatisfactory. Mounted on the triangle plate attached to the back stay causes unnecessary strain and twisting on the backstay cable.
I'm looking for modification suggestions. I was thinking a short traveler mounted on the companionway step much like I've had on other boats. Keeping it above the centerline seems to make so much more sense.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
I don't blame you for not liking that end of boom attachment to the triangular plate on the backstay. Some guys on the forum have gotten used to it and they like it so I'm not going to knock it. Myself, I hated it and decided to do something about it so I bought a traveler and mounted it on a Teak board in front of the companionway. Is it a pain in the butt to step over? Yes it is but I wouldn't have it any other way.
My only regret was buying that Nico Fico traveler. I should have bought the Harken instead. In fact, I just bought a used Harken off a guy on this forum last month and I love it. He shipped it up to me from his home in Virginia. It came off his O'Day 23.
So if you do spring for a traveler, buy a Harken or Garhaurer with the ropes and sheaves.
When I first mounted my old traveler, I needed to mount it on something that would conform to the seats and I used three pieces of Teak to do that. I mocked up a design out of cheap pine first, just to see how it was going to look. Teak is too expensive it experiment as you may know. I made up two mounts using patterns that I had scribed to copy the curves on the seats. The mounts are flat on the top to accept the 60" Teak board in which the track was to be attached to with 1/4"X3" bolts and nuts. I used four long 5/16" bolts, two on each side, to mount the Traveler to the seats on both sides with plywood back up plates in the cabin. The bolt heads; I carefully countersunk into the Teak using a miniature chisel set so that the track lays flat on the Teak over these bolts. Any of the smaller bolts and nuts that interfered with the placement of these three pieces of Teak, I countersunk in order to get these boards to fit snug without gaps. I just did what I had to do as the situation dictated, and it came out satisfactory.
You may want to use something other than Teak. I've been using Trex on my boat lately. I replaced a 1" Teak board under my mast tabernacle with Trex. I've also been using PVC Foam Board. I built an extrusion for my mast out this stuff and I like it. It can be glued with PVC cement. There is no limit to what can be done on a boat with these materials.
As for the triangular plate; I had it removed from my backstay years ago by the owner of Rig-Rite in Warwick RI. He made the suggestion of installing a used Johnson Handy-Lock that he had laying around in the shop and moving the open turnbuck up over it on the back stay. This worked out great for me as I was doing a lot of trailering with this boat every week at my favorite ramps.
The Handy Lock allows me to throw slack into the forestay in order to remove it to let the mast down. The other stays are left untouched.
The open turnbuckle allows me to remove the backstay through the hole in the mast head each fall when I put my boat up for the season.
Today I no longer trailer my boat save going to and from the YC on the Taunton River. In fact, I just brought my boat home last Sunday to do some work on it at the house. Hopefully I'll get my work finished and bring it back.
I'm still using a press button quick pin on my forestay which has a CDI Roller Furler on it.
As for that triangular plate that I had removed from my back stay? I had my son weld it to the end of a Gin Pole that he made up for me several years ago. "Waste not want not"- is what I always say.