Hello all, I just picked up my first sailboat, a Catalina Capri 18 (1986). I will be sailing it on White Bear Lake in Minnesota (I believe that is where it was first sold 40 years ago).
A couple questions for you guys:
1) Headsail was shredded in windstorm. It has a roller furling system. Jib cleats seem to be mounted on top of cabin. Does that limit me in what size of headsail I can replace with? Does anyone have any lightly used furling headsails they want to sell? I'm trying to have something on there before I launch the boat, but the timing of a new sail seems to be 4-6 weeks.
2) Does anyone have a PDF of the owners manual for the 86 Capri 18 or do I need to pay Catalina Direct?
3) The bottom has never been painted and is in pretty amazing shape, has been dry-sailed. Now it will be living on a buoy. My thought right now is that although it will now doubt accumulate green stuff, I can clean it off every few weeks with a scotch-brite pad and scuba mask. Honestly, everything about bottom paint sounds annoying to me, and possibly overkill for freshwater lakes. My thought is that if there is more growth than I want to expect this season, I can always paint it next year. If you think I should paint the bottom, tell me why and what I'm risking by not doing it.
Thanks all! I'm looking forward to getting on the water!
A couple questions for you guys:
1) Headsail was shredded in windstorm. It has a roller furling system. Jib cleats seem to be mounted on top of cabin. Does that limit me in what size of headsail I can replace with? Does anyone have any lightly used furling headsails they want to sell? I'm trying to have something on there before I launch the boat, but the timing of a new sail seems to be 4-6 weeks.
2) Does anyone have a PDF of the owners manual for the 86 Capri 18 or do I need to pay Catalina Direct?
3) The bottom has never been painted and is in pretty amazing shape, has been dry-sailed. Now it will be living on a buoy. My thought right now is that although it will now doubt accumulate green stuff, I can clean it off every few weeks with a scotch-brite pad and scuba mask. Honestly, everything about bottom paint sounds annoying to me, and possibly overkill for freshwater lakes. My thought is that if there is more growth than I want to expect this season, I can always paint it next year. If you think I should paint the bottom, tell me why and what I'm risking by not doing it.
Thanks all! I'm looking forward to getting on the water!
