tapered halyards
I built a pair of "tapered" jib halyards for my cat 27 5 years ago to replace the wire/rope units that had developed "meat hooks". The masthead sheaves are too narrow for 3/8 or 5/18 line, one reason for the wire/rope. Anyway, after talking to the experts at Annapolis Performance Sailing, I chose to purchase 80 feet of 3/16 Tech 12 (Technora 12 strand single braid) for the core. The cover is 40 feet of 5/16 Samson LS, whose existing core is used to fish the new tech 12 core through the cover. The tech 12 is UV protected, bends easily over the sheaves and is much stronger than 3/8 inch sta set. The cover is tapered and buried into the core and lock stiched. Instructions available at Samson website for the single braid eye splice and the taper splice.It was very, very easy to build this halyard. And it has been very durable. The smaller diameter core runs quite easily through the narrow sheaves. The best thing is that the total cost, when purchased from APS (not West Marine, Please) was less than $90 per halyard, plus I had fun making them. Building a tapered halyard is much cheaper than purchasing a high tech douple braid and stripping the cover. You can even buy a polyester cover without a core with a messenger line run through it to pull the new core through. Cool...Building these tapered halyards allowed me to convert to all rope without going up the mast to change the masthead sheaves. It was a solution to a problem born out of racing technology.I can't believe the freak out responses from guys when anyone mentions racing. Guys open up your minds and at least try giving some of this stuff a chance. If we ignored racing technology we'd never have seat belts in cars, or dacron sails on cruising boats. Visit the website for some insight into other rigging solutions especially regarding spinnaker sheets. http://www.apsltd.com