genoa rigging
genoa rigging
from all the pictures i have seen it shows the genoa sheets running outside the spreader support wires. is this the recommended method? 
- Richard O'Brien
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- Scott
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It would work but the angle the sheet attaches to the tack of the sail would be wrong.
When you run a partially deployed genoa you should still run through the genoa blocks.
The sheet should be near perpendicular to the forestay when an imaginary line is continued through the tack of the sail. it should also l believe land near the center of the luff. Otherwise the forces applied by the sheet will distort the sail.
When you run a partially deployed genoa you should still run through the genoa blocks.
The sheet should be near perpendicular to the forestay when an imaginary line is continued through the tack of the sail. it should also l believe land near the center of the luff. Otherwise the forces applied by the sheet will distort the sail.
I completely agree with Scott, with one possible exception (not likely to happen much, but nice to know): If you only have a Genny (no jib) on board and use a furling system, and if you get into gale/storm type conditions, and are furling down to less then 20% of you Genny area to address the situation, then running sheets through the jib blocks (set full back) can reduce the amount of 'play' in the sheets and does save on sail/clew wear. Just one of those 100 things to 'preplan' for and remember if you get enough warning that you're going to be stuck out with things turning rough.
MM
MM
- NiceAft
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Scott,
I thought I understood what I thought I knew, at least that's what I thought until I read your post. Now, with the confirmation of Mad Mike, I now know that I don't.
Who's on first
Ray
I thought I understood what I thought I knew, at least that's what I thought until I read your post. Now, with the confirmation of Mad Mike, I now know that I don't.
...................YOU LOST METhe sheet should be near perpendicular to the forestay when an imaginary line is continued through the tack of the sail. it should also l believe land near the center of the luff.
Ray
- Nodak7
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furler rope
Since we are on the subject of Genoas...I have a furler and it appears that the furler line is getting shorter. Is there a way to retrieve that line from the furler without going through the hassle of disconnecting it? 
- RickJ
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Re: furler rope
The amount of line that pulls out when you furl the sail depends on how tightly it wraps. It'll wrap tighter in strong winds, resulting in more line. Conversely if you furl it when there's no wind.Nodak7 wrote:Since we are on the subject of Genoas...I have a furler and it appears that the furler line is getting shorter. Is there a way to retrieve that line from the furler without going through the hassle of disconnecting it?
The easiest way to adjust the amount of line relative to degree of furling is to disconnect the clew and rotate the whole furled sail one way or the other. E.g. if when it wraps tight you pull out all the line and it's still not all on the furler.
Cheers, Rick
- Highlander
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- Chinook
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Recently, I've been having trouble completely unfurling the genoa. The furling line is tending to pile up on the lower portion of the drum, and binds up before the sail is completely unfurled. This didn't used to occur. Anyone else experiencing this? I'm wondering if the line has become too stiff from salt accumulation, and maybe a good soak/cleaning might help. Ideas/suggestions appreciated.

