C-30 TR spinnaker

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Bill

I would like to hear from C-30 TR owners who fly a cruising spinnaker. I have some questions about how you have organized your halyard, masthead block, and sheets. Do you use the crane from Catalina Direct? What size block do you use with the crane? Where do you tie off the halyard when not in use? Thanks, Bill
 
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Allen

My Experiences

Bill, Good questions. I have an unusual set up that I inherited from the guy I bought my cruising chute from. It's hard to describe, but I'll do my best. There is a 5/16" stainless wire that is about 4" long that's in a "V" shape, with loops swaged on each end and at the pointy end of the "V". This gives me a piece of wire with 3 loops in it. I have the pointy end attached to the halyard, leaving 2 loops as attachment points. In essence, it acts as a "splitter" allowing a single halyard to be attached to 2 things instead of just one. In my case, I have a roller furling headsail attached to one, and a block attached to the other. I put the spinaker halyard through the block. Got it (I hope!)? This set up isn't ideal, but it came with the used spinnaker I bought & I've decided to use it. The benefit to me was that I didn't have to drop the mast to install the spinnaker crane. The spinnaker crane is probably ideal, but I don't use my spinnaker very often so it's not a priority to make it optimal. I have the tack of the sail attached to the bow near where the forestay attaches. I have a 3' wire lead that I use to give the sail some height so it gets more wind & doesn't get fouled by the railings or roller furler's drum. Ideally I should have it attach to a block so the tack can be adjusted for different wind conditions, but again, I don't use it enough to worry about it. I have 2 spinnaker sheets that I run OUTSIDE of the forestay so the spinnaker tacks & jibes outside of the fore-triangle. This is the main difference from a normal headsail...it tacks outside of the forestay, not between the forestay & the mast. Each sheet runs to 2 blocks I have far aft and then to the winches. Overall, the sail does really great in light air. When it's blowing less than 10 knots, I can still make decent time. It is a pain to pull out, rig & sail, though. It's not like a big genoa. You can't just set it & forget it. It needs near constant attention, but it is pretty when it's set just right & it's fun, especially on long sails in light winds where you'd rather work a sail than listen to the drone of the motor. I hope this helps. Allen Schweitzer s/v Falstaff C-30 Hull# 632
 
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