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On Jan 27, 2021, at 9:59 AM, dwight veinot via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com> 
wrote:


That all helps a lot if your halyards are led to the cockpit. Mine are and what 
you say is what i have been doing for years. But what really helps best with 
hoisting the mainsail is to have someone pumping the halyard at the mast. It’s 
a real piece of cake then to tail halyards through the clutches.
I think Allianna was built with winches and cleats for the halyards on deck 
close to the base of the mast.  I modified with blocks at the base of the mast, 
turning blocks on deck a little further aft to get the best angles to clutches 
on the coach house and winches aft of the clutches because i want to do what 
needed doing without leaving the cockpit
On Wed, Jan 27, 2021 at 1:42 AM CHARLES SCHEAFFER via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>> wrote:
I'd like to share something most of you know but some may not and it's 
something I learned the hard way.  Before hoisting sails for the first time 
this season, check that all your blocks and deck organizer sheaves turn 
properly and the sail tracks are clean.   Use a finger to check that the sheave 
turns freely in each block.  Things work easier if everything actually works, 
and if you do this the sails will thank you.

Earlier I reported that I raise the mainsail on my 36 ft saiboat by hand.  Well 
I couldn't do that when I first got my boat and needed to use a winch on 
halyards.  My sailing friends told me that was normal and winches were always 
necessary to hoist such large  sails.  My mainsail weighs only 55 to 60 pounds, 
so I thought they might be wrong.  Later, I spent some time checking all of the 
mast base halyard blocks and freeing a few frozen sheaves in the deck 
organizer, I found I could raise the mainsail by hand very easily.  These 
sheaves are deceptive when frozen and allow a halyard to pass unimpeded 
initially when there is no load, but once the strain comes on, if they are 
frozen, the halyard becomes bar taught and the job requires a winch.  I also 
learned from reading the winch catalog that the largest loads; the genoa and 
main halyards work best if reeved along the most direct path to the right side 
of a winch drum.  So now I pick the clutch directly in line with the right side 
of the Starboard winch drum for my main halyard.  All my winch drums turn 
clockwise.  My genoa halyard is reeved through the clutch directly in line with 
the right side of the Port winch drum.   I run the spinnaker halyards through 
the outermost clutches and all the other lines have lower loads so can be run 
as you like.  And I label the clutches.

I also hoist the Genoa by hand onto the furler and because I clean the foil 
grooves and spray the sail tabbing with MackLube, it goes up pretty easily.  
The lube also allows easy adjustment of the halyard tension when shaping the 
sail while sailing.  I usually pick a lightwind day and extend the genoa 
halyard so I can wrap the tail round the winch drum and lead it to the bow 
where I feed the sail into the groove as I pull the halyard.  I can clear any 
snags as they develop and the sail goes up happy and quick.

So clean and lube your winches and the clutches too.
Mark your halyards so you can repeat proper settings.
These things make operating the boat so much easier.

Sorry for the long rant.

Chuck Scheaffer, Resolute 1989 C&C 34R, Pasadena Md


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Thanks to all of the subscribers that contributed to the list to help with the 
costs involved.  If you want to show your support to the list - use PayPal to 
send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray  Thanks - Stu
Thanks to all of the subscribers that contributed to the list to help with the 
costs involved.  If you want to show your support to the list - use PayPal to 
send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray  Thanks - Stu

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