The reason Joe from San Diego points out for using the Cunningham over the halyard is exactly why I installed one on my C30. I probably could have run the halyard back to the helm but never got around to it and adjusting the halyard at the mast was a pain. I'd end up with line all over the place and couldn't see what was happening to the sail plus the sail is heavy and I'd have to use the winch. "Sailors (humans) will do what's easy and not what's hard" so I rarely adjusted the halyard.
When I installed the Cunningham I couldn't believe how easy it made the job plus I could see what was happening to the sail (I ran the line to the helm). I liked it so much I installed a Cunningham on the jib!!
Hi Don:
Always follow your threads with interest.
Reading your above, my halyards are lead to the cockpit. So re-tensioning the luff from the top isn't an issue. But an observation in my case is that:
- After my mainsail is hoisted (all the way to the top by hand) and tensioned (with the cabin top winch);
- And then my topping lift is slackened so that the boom then drops down a few inches and becomes supported by the mainsail;
- And then I sail for a while (usually in stiff SF Bay winds) ....
My lower mainsail luff will start to get those unsightly scallops. And I find that unless I head into the wind, slacken the main sheet and boom vang, raise the boom with the topping lift to relieve the friction of the slugs against the backside of the mast sail track, that re-tensioning the halyard will not remove the scallops in the lower third or so of the luff.
However, just a moderately hard tug on my 3:1 purchase cunningham (led to the cockpit) removes them easily.
This as peter-ms also observed (in much fewer words).
My mainsail has a reinforced cunningham grommet fitted only above the primary tack. Because winds on central SF Bay are almost always small craft warning velocity, it is a rare day that I have the mainsail all the way to the top.
Maybe I should add cunningham fittings on the sail also above my 1st and 2nd reef tack points. Naw, that's overkill! Just wish I could use my cunningham more often.
rardi