The only Garhauher gear on BlueJ is a nifty mastbase plate to hold blocks at the FRONT of the mast. Only 15 bucks! With a double ended vang and every mast control line coming back to the cockpit, we have lots of turns.
Looks like the back of the mast, i.e., behind the mast, unless I'm missing something.at the FRONT of the mast
Yea. I think there are 22 control lines coming into the cockpit. You do what you can to help keep them straight.And the different colored lines is a nice touch. On my boat, it's the "white one"...no, the other "white one"
David: I don't have a drawing but there is a picture of it posted on my website (www.sailtrimproducts.com) under Don's mod's. For some reason the picture won't enlarge - I'm not a computer person and the person who designed my site is no longer available and I don't know how to fix the picture problem.Don,
Do you have a simple drawing of this arrangement?
In general yes. But you still have to have a way to keep the clew attached the to the boom; NOT just the outhaul. This can be a velcro strap around the boom, a strong slug, or even the last 4-5 inches of the bolt rope.... just cut it with an electric heat knife.This is a bit off topic but relates. My main was built with a foot bolt rope which I have always ran in the boom foot groove. Can I use this sail as a loose footed main just by not threading the bolt rope into the boom and just using the sail slug that is at the clew?
It might be OK, but straps do a better job of spreading the load and make it easier to adjust. BTW, the sail does not need a 'shelf' or 'skirt', indeed most modern loose footed sails do not have them.My sail has a 2" long sail slug at the clew before the bolt rope starts. I am guessing that it might not work quite as well as a sail purpose built to be loose footed because it will not have the shelf built into the foot to prevent wind from spilling under the bottom but it would make outhaul tension easier to adjust. With an 8:1 outhaul I can tension just fine but when I want to ease the tension, the rope hangs up and I need to go forward to pull the sail forward to get the shape I want.
Any sailmaker will make/sell you one. Just call a local loft. They will want to know how big the sail is, and how big around your boom is. I know people that have made them themselves.I have seen boats with a clew strap but have not seen them for sale. Where do you get them?
I guess I don't understand how that strap will slide on the boom. Doesn't it bind up when making adjustments? I've done without, relying on the sail slug to slide, but there is significant friction. I decided to end my sailing season over the weekend when a pin came loose inside the boom and left my outhaul non-operational. I sailed on Saturday by simply hauling the clew as far back as I could with some "small stuff". Luckily, I didn't have to flatten the main too much.Any sailmaker will make/sell you one. Just call a local loft. They will want to know how big the sail is, and how big around your boom is. I know people that have made them themselves.
We're starting a movement to call this a "shirt tail".shelf' or 'skirt