Hi All,
So as the boat is new to me I decided in the off season to have a rigger go through the mast and all the gear (Furler) and his feedback was "Furler is good but you need a new halyard. He did the halyard and additional work and and then I had him step the Mast.
I noticed the furler was very stiff when I was prepping to put up the Jib.
I had a different rigger come in and tune the rig and look at the furler as well. Here is is feedback:
Problem:
Furling system will not rotate (counter-clockwise) and appears to be catching the headstay wire (1X19 S.S. wire) internally and springing back (clockwise rotation). This may be due to worn, broken and/or missing bushing/bearings in the drum or one of the lower foils (aluminum extrusions). Suspected wire damage and major safety issue.
Top cap and bearing holding on the upper foil is missing
Halyard wrapstop is lifted/rotated from its correct position
Top foil should be longer
Solution(s):
Remove headstay and furler
Lay along dock for inspection/repair or replace
Option 1:
Attempt disassembly of furler (can be difficult/problematic with older furler units due to corrosion with s.s. screws and aluminum foils) and inspect/repair damage(s)
Replace damaged headstay
Replace top foil
Option 2:
Replace furler unit with Harken MKIV Unit 0
Replace headstay
Forego costly disassembly and repair, esp if irreparable damage is present
Parts for older units can be costly, esp. the foils
Thoughts...?
Thanks,
Chris
So as the boat is new to me I decided in the off season to have a rigger go through the mast and all the gear (Furler) and his feedback was "Furler is good but you need a new halyard. He did the halyard and additional work and and then I had him step the Mast.
I noticed the furler was very stiff when I was prepping to put up the Jib.
I had a different rigger come in and tune the rig and look at the furler as well. Here is is feedback:
Problem:
Furling system will not rotate (counter-clockwise) and appears to be catching the headstay wire (1X19 S.S. wire) internally and springing back (clockwise rotation). This may be due to worn, broken and/or missing bushing/bearings in the drum or one of the lower foils (aluminum extrusions). Suspected wire damage and major safety issue.
Top cap and bearing holding on the upper foil is missing
Halyard wrapstop is lifted/rotated from its correct position
Top foil should be longer
Solution(s):
Remove headstay and furler
Lay along dock for inspection/repair or replace
Option 1:
Attempt disassembly of furler (can be difficult/problematic with older furler units due to corrosion with s.s. screws and aluminum foils) and inspect/repair damage(s)
Replace damaged headstay
Replace top foil
Option 2:
Replace furler unit with Harken MKIV Unit 0
Replace headstay
Forego costly disassembly and repair, esp if irreparable damage is present
Parts for older units can be costly, esp. the foils
Thoughts...?
Thanks,
Chris