Or just move the winches. My thought is converting to a wheel instead of a tiller went beyond the original design of many boats. Compare sitting comfortably with a tiller in one hand and sheet in the other to standing at the wheel and not being able to reach the sheets. They never made the conversion complete. Our Mark 1 Catalina had the throttle control at my feet while standing at the wheel.Hmmmm. Good thinking, Rob. I'll have to check out the direction of travel and how things would line up. Sure sounds like a better use of money if it'll do the trick.
Without a handle working, a winch offers no mechanical advantage to a line wrapped around it.Kermit
Just musing but... Alternatively, could you add a fair lead to a cam cleat that is in the same run with your jib sheet winches. Leave a few turns on the winch and run the line back to the cam cleat near the wheel. Your existing winches would still give you mechanical advantage and would work in all but the heaviest of conditions when you really needed to crank down hard.
Hmmm.... I'm not sure that is correct. There is a big difference in the length of the lever arm when the handle is installed but you still get the distance from the center of the drum to it's outer diameter (the radius) as a defacto lever arm. So there is still mechanical advantage on the winch even without the winch handle at work. I've sailed on a 50' schooner before and the main sheet had a winch that was 10" diameter. And in a light 8mph wind, I could pull that line by hand.... I'm not that strong. I'm pretty sure I had some help.Without a handle working, a winch offers no mechanical advantage to a line wrapped around it.
I *really* want to use them in Canada. With you onboard. On our way to get thrown out of a bar or 5.The aft winches were an option for the C270. I found a couple on sale and mounted them by the helm, and they get used almost constantly.
Hmmm... No.Hmmm.... I'm not sure that is correct. There is a big difference in the length of the lever arm when the handle is installed but you still get the distance from the center of the drum to it's outer diameter (the radius) as a defacto lever arm. So there is still mechanical advantage on the winch even without the winch handle at work. I've sailed on a 50' schooner before and the main sheet had a winch that was 10" diameter. And in a light 8mph wind, I could pull that line by hand.... I'm not that strong. I'm pretty sure I had some help.
Hmmm.... yeah I think you are right.Hmmm... No.
All the mechanical advantage in a winch comes from the ratio of the handle:drum sweep. Bigger winches might have 2:1 3: or 4:1 internal reductions that multiply that, but a simple wrap and a pull does nothing more that act like a line brake, and indeed ADDS internal friction. If you do 4 inches of effort and get 4 inches of work, going around the biggest drum in the world does nothing for you. There is no such thing as a free lunch.
I'm glad you said what you did. All I know is having a winch helps. Never knew why. Just did.Hmmm.... yeah I think you are right.
I was getting ideas of block and tackle mixed up in my mind but there is no trade-off of force for distance on a winch. My bad.
Hey Ralph, we have to have a discussion with Kermee. Removed from 5 is the price of admission.or 5
It took me a while to figure out your picture, had to turn my laptop. Is that a spinnaker halyard and foil for the jib that you can store at the mast? I must have missed something about the winches.And yes u need one of these too
The spinnaker crane has been moved forward 6" for the top-down furler as the drums could touch.Is that a spinnaker halyard and foil for the jib
The Hunter 260 is fractional. He has all the room in the world for a spin halyard. You boat was messy because it is masthead and not designed from the onset for spinnaker.And yes u need one of these too