Just sharing... So, for the 3rd season out of 5 my marina dropped my boat in the water with the main halyard shackle at the top of the mast. I usually make them go fetch it on principle, but I was in a hurry, and I have a windlass with a drum and a bosun's chair. Why not just go get it?I attached the chair to the topping lift, and one of the other guys in the marina loaded the line on the windlass drum, and hit the button. I heard this sickening groaning sound, and I wasn't moving. A subsequent inspection with binoculars showed that the topping lift had jumped off the sheave, and was now jammed beside it. Ten years of use, and on the day I need it most, the stupid thing decides to jump off the tracks. Now I have TWO unusable lines.My boat has a 7/8 fractional rig, which means that going up on the jib halyard left me with about 6 feet of shinnying. Ever try to shinny up an aluminum mast? I found out that I can't do it, anyway. The big problem was that I couldn't keep the bosun's chair snugly on my rear as I climbed, and that felt overwhelmingly dangerous.Finally I realized that I could reach the main halyard--the original object of the trip up--with a boat hook if I went up on the jib halyard. When I get to the top, I discovered that the main halyard shackle pin was unscrewed, but I managed to twist the halyard around the boat hook and got enoug purchase to pull it down. Success!Then we went sailing, and the wind died to 5 knots.What a day.Paulsv Escape Artisth336