Dennis

Do the same on Fireball where we launch Genoas out of a long zip bag that is secured to the toe rail. We pull the zipper forward to open the bag and attach the tack and head (led thru the pre-feed and onto the the twin foil). Pull the zipper back on aft end of bag which is laid between cabin and shrouds and and attach the sheets with bowlines.  Have not used soft shackles yet and am reluctant to do so.  We do a lot of short tacking to stay out the current so the sails do a lot of thrashing about every ten to twenty minutes.  Last season a J-30 had his main halyard soft shackle drop the main about 20 minutes into the race.  Had a very difficult time trying to recover the halyard, since the J-30 is a fractional rig and the s-shackle was in the sheave at the mast head.

Don

Fireball C&C35 II


On 3/9/2019 12:48 PM, Dennis C. via CnC-List wrote:

We all have our preferred way of doing things on our boats.  :)

As a racer and long time foredeck, I fold all my headsails with the luff tape on top of itself.  If you do what I call a "cruiser fold" with the folds parallel to the foot and the head ending up in the middle, you risk ripping the luff tape when you launch the head sail.  The tape will have to come from well aft of the pre-feeder or feeder and make a sharp bend from horizontal to vertical before feeding up the track. An overly enthusiastic crewperson jumping the sail might cause the luff tape to rip off.

The way you do it is to take a "half" fold at the luff only.  This will "cock" the sail slightly.  After the half fold, match the folds with the luff laying on top of itself. The leech will form a sawtooth as the leech folder works his/her way towards the luff.  The head is then folded to lie next to the tack.  When launching, the foredeck can easily find and hook up the tack and head.

The luff tape should lay well forward in the bow pulpit an be directly under the pre-feeder/feeder so it hoists straight up without bending.

Dennis C.
Touche' 35-1 #83
Mandeville, LA

On Sat, Mar 9, 2019 at 11:09 AM Rick Brass via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com <mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>> wrote:


    And I fold my hank on sails with a different pattern than the
    sails with luff tape. With a luff tape, each fold is parallel to
    the foot of the sail and the head of the sail ends up
    approximately in the middle of the sail before I start rolling it
    up. But when I was learning to sail on Lake Michigan 5 decades ago
    with hank on sails, I learned to fold the sail perpendicular to
    the luff so all the hanks were exposed. That way you could put the
    sail down on the deck, connect the tack, put all the hanks on the
    Headstay, and then just unroll the sail and hoist. And that
    minimizes the time you need to stand on the pointy end of the boat
    for a sail change.




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