Anonymous wrote:
First, I have to say that I'm rather uneasy about the diameter of the masts - I'd expect to see something like 12in diameter, in aluminium or steel, or more in timber, to carry 79sqm on a boat of this size. They look smaller than this in the photos.
But about the winches: those Warrior winches do not look in any way suitable - not enough speed or rope capacity, and steel wire rope would not be suitable (though high modulus Dyneema or Spectra line is a possibility). Crab winches were used on commercial sailing vessels, for hoisting heavy sails, and I remember using one as a boy (terrifying!). They're still made in India (image of a typical one is attached), but I wouldn't recommend going this way.
The mainstream way of hoisting a modern junk sail is to use a self tailing winch, of suitable size and power, either manually powered, or with electric or hydraulic drive, in conjunction with a braid-on-braid rope halyard. There will be a multi-part purchase rigged, to reduce the load on the winch, and to improve safety. A heavy sail on a 1:1 halyard would come down dangerously fast if control were to be lost. My preference is for a 3:1 tackle on all sizes of sail, which is a good compromise between safety, speed and power. I think I'd want a power ratio in the winch in the range 40:1 - 50:1 to hoist 79sqm, subject to more details of the total weight of the sail bundle (most of the weight in a junk sail is in the yard and battens).
[Of course, drum winches are used on superyachts to keep control of heavily loaded lines- at superyacht prices]
Thank you very much for this information.
Regarding the masts:
The two masts are aluminium, and were made to this spec under professional consultation. But this did occur before I was in the picture. The main mast is roughly 6inches in diameter. Far below 12. I would be grateful to speak with you some more about this just in case they are unsuitable.
Regarding the winches:
The previous owner's plan was to replace the steel wire with dyneema and they calculated enough drum capacity, which I have not verified.
Personally, I am not convinced these would fare well being exposed to salt water and not suitably manufactured for the marine environment. If I went this direction I would probably get something like the image attached, a bit smaller and probably cheaper than the one in your link. Crab winches, I agree, and can imagine terrifying to use.
Most likely I will do exactly as you described, and use two hydraulic driven self tailing winches at the cockpit. There are two existing hydraulic Lewmar Ocean 50 STs that were intended to be used dedicated to the two sheet lines. I would either use these also for the Halyards as I am not intending to race, or will just get two extra winches so each line is on a dedicated service.
However,
I am still curious to hear some good reasons to avoid any form of captive barrel type winch for the halyards, assuming ideal conditions (marine grade winch, suitable power and capacity, speed).