Call any rigger
and get a quote for replacement of all standing rigging. If your boat is in the water, it is a two man job. One man has to repeatedly go up the mast and remove each piece of rigging after they've placed a temporary support in place with a halyard. Then they have to measure the piece and properly swage fittings to the wire. Both riggers will work at this to speed the process up. Then return up the mast and install the new piece of rigging. Repeat this process for each piece of rigging. It's very time-consuming at the hourly rate for two professional riggers. Add to that the very considerable cost of material. Check any catalog and you'll see, for instance, that sta-lok terminals can easily cost more than $50 each. Type 316 stainless rigging wire is $4 per foot for 7/16". How many feet of rigging wire are there in a big boat's standing rigging? Lots. When it's all done, the rig needs to be tuned. But, if you wanted to have this all done with the mast down, and make it a one man job, you'd have to add the cost of hauling the boat, dropping the mast, yard time, possibly painting the bottom if your paint cannot be exposed to air, and reversing the whole process. For you winter guys who take your boat out of the water for months each year, this cost might be part of your annual nut. But, in Florida, the boats are used year-round. And in this area, the total cost adds up to what I cited earlier. If anyone can trust the integrity of the entire rig, and therefore boat, to their amateur swaging skills, then all the professional labor costs can be eliminated. In the years that I've owned my boat, I've contracted out only two jobs. First, repair of the hull, toerail, and deck after damage from Hurricane Georges. Second, replacement of the standing rigging.