Hi:
I thought to ask the Cherubini crowd for usage tips in repect of the spring loaded reefing line jam cleats that are located at the forward end of the Kenyon boom right below the gooseneck. (As shown in the photo below.)
Of course when putting in a reef, the cleats are useful to hold line tension when drawing the reef point clews onto the boom.
But when shaking out a reef, the auto spring closure prevents the line from going in the opposite direction as the sail is raised.
The only solution I have found so far is to slide the line to the side off the sheave so it by-passes the jam cleat as the line is drawn into the boom. But the hole for the line in the goose neck is small (see picture), and now the off center entry angle causes lots of friction and jaming which prevents me from raising the sail without constantly trying to free the line as it enters the hole.
I am thinking to remove the spring action on the jam cleats and then just jam it closed by hand; or to remove the jam cleats all together; or to devise some sort of arrangement so the jam cleat is forced to stay open when I want to shake out a reef.
I don't think that the jam cleats are really necessary for my case, but maybe I'm not seeing somehting. From the gooseneck sheave, I've led the two reef point clew lines down to blocks at the mast base. So for reefing. I can pull up on the line quite taught by hand, then tie off at a normal cleat on the mast. As an inland waterway sailor, goiing on deck up to the mast isn't usually a major danger, so I am not planning to run the reef lines back to the cockpit just yet.
Thanks for comments/ideas on how to solve.
regards,
rardi
I thought to ask the Cherubini crowd for usage tips in repect of the spring loaded reefing line jam cleats that are located at the forward end of the Kenyon boom right below the gooseneck. (As shown in the photo below.)
Of course when putting in a reef, the cleats are useful to hold line tension when drawing the reef point clews onto the boom.
But when shaking out a reef, the auto spring closure prevents the line from going in the opposite direction as the sail is raised.
The only solution I have found so far is to slide the line to the side off the sheave so it by-passes the jam cleat as the line is drawn into the boom. But the hole for the line in the goose neck is small (see picture), and now the off center entry angle causes lots of friction and jaming which prevents me from raising the sail without constantly trying to free the line as it enters the hole.
I am thinking to remove the spring action on the jam cleats and then just jam it closed by hand; or to remove the jam cleats all together; or to devise some sort of arrangement so the jam cleat is forced to stay open when I want to shake out a reef.
I don't think that the jam cleats are really necessary for my case, but maybe I'm not seeing somehting. From the gooseneck sheave, I've led the two reef point clew lines down to blocks at the mast base. So for reefing. I can pull up on the line quite taught by hand, then tie off at a normal cleat on the mast. As an inland waterway sailor, goiing on deck up to the mast isn't usually a major danger, so I am not planning to run the reef lines back to the cockpit just yet.
Thanks for comments/ideas on how to solve.
regards,
rardi
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