88 23ft. wingkeel questions

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M

Matthew

I am new to sailing and I am having a problem with the main sail rigging on my 88 23ft. winkeel. I figured out that the larger block and tackle assmbly attaches to the traveler but to which eyelet on the boom? Where does the smaller block and tackle attach and what purpose does that serve? One final question: Is there something to hold the boom up when the main sail is lowered? If so, what is it and where and how does it attach? Anything else I should know? Any help is greatly appreciated Thank you Matthew
 
J

Jerry

Where the lines go

Matthew, I have an '85 H23 with a Kenyon mast and boom. I can tell you how mine is rigged. The larger tackle is the main sheet and it should attach to the boom directly above the traveler. The smaller tackle sounds like a vang. One end should attach near to base of the mast and the other to a bail about 3 or 4 feet out on the boom. You use the vang in light winds or when sailing down wind to control the shape of the mainsail. Without the vang, the wind will lift the boom and you will spill wind at the top of the sail. There should be a topping lift to hold the boom when the sail is furled. Its a line from the top of the mast (attached just inside where the backstay attaches to the mast) to the outboard end of the boom. The line runs through the starboard side of the boom to the mast end and hangs down a foot or two. You can use the topping lift to lift the boom to give you more headroom in the cockpit. You can get by tying the end of the boom to the backstay. Your mainsail should have a set of reef points about three feet up from the boom. There should be a reefing line running from a grommet on the leech of the mainsail to a pully on the portside of the boom to a line that hangs down on the port side of the boom at the base of the mast. That line is for reefing the main. The mainsail should have two pieces of rope through the mainsail that you use for tying around the boom to reef the sail. Regards, Jerry
 
Apr 19, 1999
1,670
Pearson Wanderer Titusville, Florida
Reefing line for Matthew

My topping lift is on the port side of the boom and the reefing line is on the starboard side along with both halyards. I was told that this setup keeps all the primary lines for reefing on the stbd side of the mast. That way, you don't have to cross back and forth from one side of the boom to the other when reefing. The other advantage of this setup is that since you are reefing the mainsail from the stbd side, the boom has to be over on the port side. This places the boat on starboard tack and gives you right of way, which means you don't have to stop in the middle of reefing to get out of somebody's way. In case you haven't run the reefing line yet, it goes from the gooseneck through the boom, out the stbd sheave at the end, up to the reef cringle (the metal eye in the leech of the sail), through the sail from stbd to port, straight down to the boom where it passes through one of the small bails under the boom from port to stbd. Put a stopper knot in the line and there you have it. The knot should be on the stbd side just like everyting else. Rigging the line like this, will double the downward pull on the leech cringle and also provide some aft pull to keep the reefed foot of the sail taut. It's also a good idea to tie a separate line through the cringle once everything is reefed tight. If the reef line chafes somewhere else (e.g. inside the boom) you won't lose the reef. Color-coded lines also make it easier to avoid mixups at the gooseneck. For example, my topping lift is white, the outhaul is white with blue tracer and the reefing line is white with green tracer. Happy sailing! Peter H23 "Raven"
 
R

Ralph McGrw

Come visit!

I'm over in Hayward wisc. If you get a chance in the next month come on over and we can go for a sail. SEARAY0301@aol.com
 
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