Hi Tom, 10 years ago when I replaced my wire to rope halyards. I went with 7/16 
cos yacht braid and have had no issues. Never changed the sheeves. The main 
does make some noise now and then. But the next owner needs some projects. 


Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE DeviceDoug Mountjoy POYC Pegasus Lf38 
-------- Original message --------From: Tom Lochhaas via CnC-List 
<[email protected]> Date: 5/12/17  12:30  (GMT-08:00) To: 
[email protected] Cc: Tom Lochhaas <[email protected]> Subject: Stus-List 
Messenger line to wire halyard 
Hi, experts!It's time to replace my main halyard on my LF38. The original is 
wire-to-rope, and I plan to replace with the same (3/16 7X19 wire, 7/16 
doublebraid). I have noted that the halyard sheave at the masthead is quite 
small and narrow - for wire only - meaning the halyard could jam if the rope 
part (or likely, the transition from wire to rope section) had to pass over it. 
Therefore it seems the only way to safely do this (no desire to climb the mast) 
would be to (1) raise the halyard up (with a line on the sail head shackle) to 
the point where wire is exiting the mast at the bottom, (2) cut the old wire 
here or near where it joins the old rope, 3) attach the shackle-end of the new 
wire halyard to the tail-end (cut) of the old wire, and (4) carefully pull 
downward on the old wire outside to bring the new wire up inside the mast and 
over the sheave and down where I will either swage a thimble for the shackle or 
use a swageless fitting.First, I don't see any other logical way to do this, 
and it should be pretty simple as long as the two wires are well connected in a 
smooth slim way so that nothing gets hung up inside the mast or on the 
sheave.Second, I'm thinking it's better to temporarily join the two wire ends 
than to attach a messenger first to remove the old halyard, and then a second 
messenger attachment to install the new halyard. Either way, a messenger line 
or the new wire has to be connected to the old wire, so why not do this just 
once rather than twice with twice the risk of something happening.Let me know 
if you see any fallacies or problems in my thinking so far. So the question I 
face is how best to temporarily make a "butt joint" of two wire ends for 
pulling the new halyard through the mast? I know how to do this with rope, 
which can be stitched together and then taped, so that the tape itself is 
taking the full burden, but you can't "stitch" 7X19 wire as easily. (Or maybe 
one can? Twist it open a bit to sneak a flexible wire or strong thin line 
through and then twist it back to shape and hope the wire's flexibility and 
shape haven't been altered, and repeat with the other wire end, then tape?) 
Could I risk a good tape by itself holding the ends together? (There seems to 
be no friction at all inside the mast - I'm just concerned with getting the 
"joint" over the sheave smoothly.) Or maybe tape and then wrap over the tape 
very tightly with a thin waxed line? Any great ideas on the safest way to do 
this?Thanks!Tom Lochhaas
1980 LF38 Topanga IINewburyport, MA 



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