In a message dated 7/7/2008 4:07:34 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

I'm  getting old too but won't admit it.  Ask my wife. 

It's been 9  years since I last used slugs and I don't remember all the
reasons.   I'm getting old.  Oh, yeah. I said that already.     Aerodynamics
is part of the reason.  When rigging at the dock, in the  wind, you need to
raise the main all the way, while shoving slugs up the  slot.  Let's see,
that's one hand to aim the slugs, one to pull the  halyard and one to keep
the previously loaded slugs from dropping  out.  And I've only got two hands
for singlehanding.  Who said  slugs are easier?

With a boltrope, just start the first few inches,  cleat the halyard and on
to the next task.  No need to flog the whole  sail before you're out on the
water and it's time to use it. 

I  started handling boltrope sails under race conditions 54 years ago.   It
comes naturally and seems more seamanlike. 

Bill Riker
M15 -  #184
Storm Petrel



It's rare to see anyone who has used bolt ropes and slugs go back to bolt  
ropes. In my view bolt ropes are less "seamanlike" than slugs. Single  handing 
takes longer to raise, lower and stow a bolt rope sail than a slug sail.  The 
boat has to be positioned with bow to wind to install bolt ropes. Slugs can  be 
put in from any wind direction and sail raised later...but as they say  
"different strokes". 
 
Like the others who have already posted, I don't raise the  sail as slugs are 
fed in. They get stuffed in the slot before the halyard  is hooked up to the 
head. Slugs falling out aren't a problem and neither is  inserting a slug 
stop. There's no more feeding the luff after slugs are  installed no matter how 
many times the sail is raised or  lowered.  
 
How aerodynamic sails are with bolt ropes are (to make them faster  than slug 
sails) could be debated (whether it makes a difference on a Monty  trailer 
sailor). A tight halyard with slugs gives near or  equal results...too close to 
call. I seriously doubt Montys with  bolt ropes sail faster/closer than Montys 
with slugs. If a person is slicing  frog hairs, baggy sails are best downwind 
and could be an equalizer when  using less "aerodynamic" slugs. In my humble 
opinion the main reason  bolt ropes are seen is because mfg costs are lower. 
It's like sleeves on dink  sails...cheaper to make but less versatile in the 
sail handling dept. 
 
I started sailing 51 yrs ago on a old beat up El Toro pram I bought for $5  
from my paper route. There weren't many bolt ropes in the 1950s. Most boats  
had wood masts with tracks and slides. My first bolt rope (which  I soon 
converted to slugs) was in the late 1960s...and a few  others since. The most 
recent 
is on a trailer in my back yard...next to one  slugged boat, one tracked boat 
and one sleeved boat. Slugs and tracks  are best to me.
 
Bill P.



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