First of all I would like to thank Brian W for talking me through the first mast stepping on my 94 H26. It made a huge difference being able to talk it through with someone who had experience. Here are the questions I have after getting the mast up:
1) When I hooked the shrouds up I went off a blurry picture from the manual which lead me to think the lower stays attached to the forward ubolt and the upper stays attached the aft ubolt. Is this correct or did I get it backwards?
2) My boat has a aftermarket Harken Unit 00-AL roller furler. The furler seems to be pretty slack and is not holding the mast up. Is the mast held in place only by the upper and lower stays?
3) Above the mast attachment point for the upper stays there seems to be an aft bend in the spar. It seems as though the tension from the rigging to the rear of the boom is bending it back. Is this normal? Or do I need to tension the stays.
4) When the jib sheet is unfurled it hits the bow pulpet and life lines. I made sure the job halyard is hoisted as high as it can go. Is this a faulty installation causing this?
Thank you again for all your help as I work through the new boat.
1) When I hooked the shrouds up I went off a blurry picture from the manual which lead me to think the lower stays attached to the forward ubolt and the upper stays attached the aft ubolt. Is this correct or did I get it backwards?
2) My boat has a aftermarket Harken Unit 00-AL roller furler. The furler seems to be pretty slack and is not holding the mast up. Is the mast held in place only by the upper and lower stays?
3) Above the mast attachment point for the upper stays there seems to be an aft bend in the spar. It seems as though the tension from the rigging to the rear of the boom is bending it back. Is this normal? Or do I need to tension the stays.
4) When the jib sheet is unfurled it hits the bow pulpet and life lines. I made sure the job halyard is hoisted as high as it can go. Is this a faulty installation causing this?
Thank you again for all your help as I work through the new boat.