I am with Steve on that. You can over think it, if you want to. But if you buy 
about 2x the boat length you should be fine. At the price you pay for a line of 
this diameter you can add extra 10 ft. for good  measure.
Of course involving calculus is so much more fun.
Marek


Sent from my Bell Samsung device over Canada's largest network.<div>
</div><div>
</div><!-- originalMessage --><div>-------- Original message 
--------</div><div>From: Stevan Plavsa via CnC-List <[email protected]> 
</div><div>Date: 2016/06/21  14:11  (GMT-07:00) </div><div>To: 
[email protected] </div><div>Cc: Stevan Plavsa <[email protected]> 
</div><div>Subject: Re: Stus-List Roller Furling Line </div><div>
</div>
I'm really low tech - hoist the sail at the dock, connect the furling line
.. roll the sail up by hand (by manually rotating the drum) .. go a few
extra turns - to someone else's point, undoing jib sheets later is easy if
need be.

You guys are overthinking it :)

(probably I'm underthinking it)

If the question is "how much line will I need" then I guess you could do
some math - or just measure the old line.

Steve
Suhana, C&C 32
Toronto
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