Stavanger, Sunday
Hi there
Hoisting Johanna’s 48sqm sail has always been a bit of a challenge. The sail is so big and I am not. At first I had fitted it with a wooden yard; a direct copy of the PJR standard yard. This had worked well on Malena’s 32sqm sail (and still does). However, the cube law of scaling brought the weight of this yard up in over 20kg, I think – a real monster. This, together with 5-part sheet and no halyard winch made hoisting simply impractical for me alone. By constructing a much lighter aluminium yard, changing to 3-part sheet and finally adding a self-tailing winch, I got back in control.
When I am alone, I hoist 5 panels in the cockpit, then rest a bit while stuffing the tail in the bag. Then finally the two upper panels are raised with the winch. Still quite a job, but bearable. Most of the blocks have ball bearings, but they could have been a number bigger. Replacing the halyard with a new one a few years back made hoisting easier.
With two on board I hoist the whole sail by the mast as Kurt does, with the crew handling the tail. As for 5- versus 3-part halyard, I think I will stick with 5-part as long as the sail comes down without any need for down-hauling. The uneven number lets me replace the old one with a new without going aloft.
Now, last week I received a new gadget from England; an electric winch handle called WinchRite ®. I have not tried it yet, but will do as soon as the weather improves. I have done some rough calculations and it should be able to raise my sail 3-6 times between charging (its internal battery). This is a much cheaper alternative (around 500£) than the deck mounted electric winches which cost 4-5 times as much. The plan behind this is that I will be freer to drop and hoist sail again 2-3 times a day without wearing myself out.
Conclusion:
1 Don’t fit too heavy yards and battens
2 Use good blocks and rather one number too big for the rope size.
3 Be aware of sheet friction.
4 The parrels, luff- and yard- adds friction too. Make the luff parrel simple or it will hold the sail back when hoisting.
5 Put the halyard winch in the best position for swinging the handle with both hands, letting you use your body on it and not just one poor little hand.
Cheers, Arne
PS: It is tempting to try the 3-part halyard, now if that WinchRite thing turns out to work. Maybe...