Evgeniy Goldshtein wrote:
Ok, sailing on the main with foresail sheeted to the center line worked for me.
Well, that's good news, anyway.
Could you guys tell what solutions exist for making the sailing more quiet?
In my case I have a nice "boom" when the battens hit the mast (on a light wind usually),
This is particularly noticeable with a metal mast. Your best bet is to keep the batten parrels pretty tight and perhaps use contact cement to stick something like closed-cell foam to the battens where they hit the mast.
squeaks from battens and/or ropes rubbing the mast
You could try putting some grease on the ropes if it really irritates you. But I find it quite a comforting and companionable noise, myself.
and lately squeaks from the wood cones that holds the mast in the partners.
This sounds like your wedges are moving. I have used an unorthodox but so far successful method of both preventing them from moving and from squeaking: I sent some foaming polyurethane glue ("Gorilla") down the gaps. Not enough completely to glue it all up, but enough to turn all the wedges into one more-or-less solid one. I doubt the glue will stick particularly well to either the mast or the partners, but can no doubt chisel some of the wedges out if I have to. If your wedges are very good ones, I suggest you number them, remove them, lightly grease mast and partners and then put them back in order before adding the glue, to make them easier to remove another time.
Masts and battens are made of aluminium and yard, boom and battens also covered with PVC pipe in the area where it touches the mast.
I've heard about foaming the battens, but how could it hold the sun?
Thanks!