Arne Kverneland wrote:
Stavanger, Wednesday, with snow piling up here
Graham
For some reason a sort of Hong Kong Parrel (HKP) phobia seems to have spread on this site. This was understandable as long as the throat hauling parrel (THP) had not come into use and this lead to hard loading of the battens. Now that we understand the need for, and the use of the THP, I suggest one should give the HKP another chance. This summer, as we rigged Edmond Dantes with her new sail, the use of the THP indeed allowed us to trim away most of the diagonal creases most of the time , but not all of the time. So we added the HKPs and the sail was from then on looking close to perfect with only light loads on the HKPs.
So, again, I suggest you give the HK parrels a new chance, and hopefully this will help taming the sail during the setting and reefing process.
Cheers, Arne
I think you may have missed the point here, Arne. HKPs may help to trim out the diagonal creases when the sail is set, but what they won't do is to stop the upper batten going forward of the lower batten, as a panel is reefed (which is Graham's problem). That's a simple matter of geometry. A HKP must go slack as the panel is reefed.
Phobia? Ideology?
Anyone with an enquiring mind will try out different styles of junk rig and different styles of rigging them. They will discard the things they don't like, and keep the things they do like.
Everyone should try HKPs.
Once.
I tried smoking in my youth, didn't like it, don't do it. No ideology involved, just not my thing.
I tried HKPs, don't like them, don't use them. Not my thing.
Perhaps I should get a plaque to hang on the guardwires:
"No phobias or ideologies were misused during the rigging of this vessel"