I should have mentioned this in my earlier mail about the Loos gauge.
What we used to do was to get the boat all tuned up to our liking by doing a
lot of sailing and letting experience guide us when it was just right. Then
we'd measure the tension and note it on paper. When we needed to retension
the rig, after some change or work, we'd take it back to our previous
readings, sometimes we'd still tweak it a bit (racers are fanatics). Of
course this assumes that the rig has the initial "stretch" out of it. Even
wire rope will change a very little bit under load, not much, but when I was
a diehard racer I thought it all meant something.
As for the leeward rigging loosening, that is very common as there is always
some give. You probably don't want the rig so tight that there is no give,
as that would put a overdo strain on all the fittings. But then it probably
shouldn't be so loose so the shrouds to flap in the breeze. Probably the
best indicator is how the mast looks under the press of a medium breeze. Go
forward and sight up the stick and see how far it is falling off. The amount
is dependent on the boat. Maybe some of the longtime Vega owners have a
better feel for this on the Vega than I do.
_____
From:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf
Of Chris Brown
Sent: Wednesday, July 12, 2006 4:07 PM
To:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [AlbinVega] Rig tension
The device is the Loos Tension Gauge. They come in two or three sizes and
cost under $100 US for the smaller sizes which would be used for the Vega.
We used them all the time when we were racing, but still did a little hand
tweaking when we were finished. You can find them on the internet.
Most sold in the US have the wire size scale in inches, in other countries
it is in metric. There is no difference in the gauge; it is only in the
table of values used to calculate the tension from the reading (if that
makes sense). I was able to get the metric table for my US scale when I went
to a European boat once, so I didn't have to buy another gauge.