I have a boom vang (the image pictured is not my boat), but I find it near 
impossible to adjust under any load.  The 3:1 block just isn’t enough in 
anything but ultra light air.  

 

About my question about the pressure on the forward block (see picture in link 
below), isn’t it the same force as the #3 block in the sheets (mid boom)?  

 

My new (uninstalled as yet) traveler is also the new straight Garhauer 
traveler.  It seems massive!

 

Joe McCary

Aeolus II #4795

West River, MD

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

 

On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]



I'm no engineer, but I would think it is.  Its only purpose is as a turning 
block.  It doesn't have the same pressures as the ones between the boom and 
traveler.

 

I had the original curved track traveler so I re-aligned my mainsheet control 
to the traveler car.  Now that I have the straight track travaler (Garhauer; 
fantastic!), I don't need to keep it there but I still do.

 

You should seriously consider adding a boom vang.  The midboom doesn't hold the 
boom down quite as good as the end-boom.  Your sail shape will be much better 
with a vang.

 

Bob

 

-------------- Original message -------------- 
From: "Joe McCary" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

As they say a picture is worth a million words (hey I am a photographer so I 
tend to inflate the value of a photo a bit). The image I am referring to is:

http://www.delanges.com/Catalina_27/images/Traveler_2.JPG 

Its from Steve’s website and shows his mid boom traveler. My rig will be 
slightly different, with double ended sheeting. The folks at Catalina Direct 
suggested I run the sheet from the edge of the cabin top (near the handrail) 
forward to a spinnaker block on a spring then at a 45° to the first blocks on 
the boom and so on. In the image above, while just single sided, he runs his 
sheet to the mast then down through a turning block then to a deck organizer 
then to the cleet. My question to Steve was, it appears the block closest to 
the mast is held in position by a small stainless strap with just 2 sheet metal 
screws instead of a full through bolted bail on the boom, is this strong enough?

 

Joe McCary

Aeolus II
West River, MD

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2007 12:28 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: catalina27-talk: Cruiseair on C27-alternative method

 

Joe,

you should have a boom vang running at 45* from the boom to near mast base.  
Running the mainsheet across this same area then makes sense, plus eliminating 
one block from the whole setup.

 

I think you can see what I mean from pictures on my out-of-date website: 
mywebpages.comcast.net/sailrmann

 

Bob Mann

Windcatcher

'85 #5928

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