My vega also has a A frame and I have to say that i agree with Mark, it is very stressful.
We have never brought it down with more than 2 people but bringing it up is harder and we have always used 3 people.
Bringing down the mast is not much of a problem, you just need to watch out that the mast comes down swiftly but stop before it gets to the couch roof and offer some sort of support to remove the big bolt holding it onto the tabernacle. a bit of wood in a X shape would do the trick using the sides of the cockpit to offer the X strength at the base.
One person controls the speed of the lowering the other person ensures the mast remains strait and removes the bolt from the tabernacle (watch it here because the mast will be balance on the X bit of wood, so it might shoot up and go astern), then both of you carry the mast slowly and in short motions forward till all of it is inside the boat (you will have about 1 ft sticking out astern).
The A frame needs to have lines tide on the inside to offer support also as the mast generates and incredible amount of pull. we use the bow roller as a point to reduce the load and the windlass to control the desent (the reason also to use the bow roller is so that the pull force is in the direction of the bow and not strait up which would more than likely pull off the windlass with a chunk of the deck maybe not the first time but surely one day).
I think we never spent more than 20 min brigging down the mast, however preparation was probably 18 min 2 minutes was the actual action.
Brigging the mast up is a very different story probably a 2 hr job, make sure you are not on a cross wind because it will have an impact of how the mast is being pulled up (taking the mast sideways).
It probably takes at least 3 goes, because it is difficult to see if the rigging is tangled at some point or not, so again, preparation probably takes about 90 minutes action about 30.
We have also used the pullies from the boom attached to an anchor point on the ground (if you dont have a windlass) light pole, anything beefy really, this was done on the hard so its a bit different than in the marina.
I would not bring the mast down for the fun of it for sure, but there have been occasions which it is just great, like changing light bulbs, changing the rigging, having a look at the rigging points once a year at the beggining of the season or storage.
So, preparation, pick a day which is as still as possible (at least the first time) and take your time, if the operation is not going smoothly lower it again and start once again, once it gets past the 45 degrees you are almost there what ever was going to go wrong would have so by then, however dont get me wrong, if there is a gust at this point and its a cross wind there is little you can do, but the lower rigging on the side of the mast will start helping you control the position of the mast, another thing, the last 5 degrees, do it slowly and make sure the back stay is connected.
Good luck!
________________________________
From: Tom Fenton tjhfenton@...
To:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 17 July 2013, 1:02
Subject: Re: [AlbinVega] Re: Hinged Mast:
It seems that the Amercian Vega website has been hacked. Could someone who
knows who to contact let them know (if the link doesn't work for you too).
Tom
Tom Fenton
SV Beowulf, V2977
www.blog.mailasail.com/beowulf