News:

2-15-25: Gerry Hutchins, founder of Com-Pac, has crossed the bar and headed west.

Sincere condolences to his family, and a huge "Thank You!" to Gerry from all of us, I'm sure.
Requiescat in pace.

Main Menu

Genoa UV strip

Started by wes, February 26, 2014, 09:10:57 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

wes

Dear CP27 guys who have the Isomat Isofurl furler (are you out there?):

I am in the uncomfortable position of needing to order new sails without ever having sailed the 27 or even raised the mast. The question is whether to have the UV protection strip installed on the port or starboard side of the genoa.

Like most Com-Pacs I've seen, my furling control line is on the port side of the boat. But the furler itself is agnostic about whether the line enters the drum on the high side (ie. pulling the line rotates drum counterclockwise and wraps sail such that UV strip should be on starboard side of sail) or on the low side (ie. pulling line rotates drum clockwise and UV strip would be on port side of sail).

Any opinions about best solution for this particular furling system would be much appreciated. Thanks!

Wes
"Sophie", 1988 CP 27/2 #74
"Bella", 1988 CP 19/3 #453
Bath, North Carolina

deisher6

Hey Wes:
The roller furling set up on our boat was on the port side.  I removed the roller furling and had hanks put on the jib.  I will check to see which side the UV strip was on when I go to the boat today.
regards charlie

jimyoung

Wes,
On Miss B. my furling is a Harkin setup but I run the UV strip on the port but mostly because the furling line is positioned on the port side as well.  I'm not sure one is better than the other.
Capt'n Jim

wes

#3
Charlie: thanks, I will eagerly await your answer.

Jim - so if your UV strip is on the port side of the sail, your furling line must enter the drum on the bottom side. So a pull on the line (to furl the sail) would rotate the drum clockwise as viewed from above. Am I understanding that correctly? And you have had no problems with the bottom entry?

Thanks so much to both of you for the fast response; hope I can return the favor.

Wes
"Sophie", 1988 CP 27/2 #74
"Bella", 1988 CP 19/3 #453
Bath, North Carolina

BobK

Wes,
I have the same furler as you with both the line and UV on the port side.
BobK

Steady1

Wes:

Our Harken curler leads off the bottom and down the port side, as Cap'n Jim described, furling clockwise; no problems related to that as far as I can tell.  FWIW...I did add a furling line turning block at the base of stern pulpit.  The original set-up created too much of a trip hazard for me, coming from the mid-ship stanchion and up to a block on the side of the cockpit coaming; may be worth considering if yours has the standard set-up.

Bill
Bill
1997 CP27/2
Mathews, VA

skip1930

#6
Mine's on the port side, same as my furler line. 'I guess it doesn't make me no never mind'.
Can always re-roll it at the dock.

The furler line runs port side drum to a block located on each stanchion to a cleat on a 15 degree slope
located just forward of the portside winch on the OUTSIDE of the cockpit combing.  



skip.

wes

Bill - leading the furler line further aft is a very interesting idea and makes a lot of sense for single handing. Any chance you could post a picture of your setup?

Wes
"Sophie", 1988 CP 27/2 #74
"Bella", 1988 CP 19/3 #453
Bath, North Carolina

deisher6

Hey Wes, the UV strip was on the post side of the genoa.
regards charlie

wes

Port side UV strip wins the survey - I shall proceed. Thank you all for the advice! Now I know who to blame if it doesn't work out  ;)

Wes
"Sophie", 1988 CP 27/2 #74
"Bella", 1988 CP 19/3 #453
Bath, North Carolina

Steady1

Wes:

The boat's on the hard for the winter a half hour away in Deltaville.  Next time I go over, probably tomorrow, I'll try to get a usable shot.  The trick then will be to upload it to the forum.  But I'll take a whack at it!

Stand by.
Bill
1997 CP27/2
Mathews, VA

Steady1

Wes:

Beauty day here--sunny & 71 an hour ago--but temperature falling precipitously with snow-sleet-ice-something forecast overnight / tomorrow.  That said, there's a shot in Photobucket of the block as fastened to the stern pulpit (despite doing my best to follow all instructions, I can't seem to load it in here but at least you have the address).

[img]http://s1125.photobucket.com/user/CPYOA/media/IMG_0783.jpg.html/[img]

Stepping back gives perspective to see the line as it leads to the block, then the cleat.

[img]http://s1125.photobucket.com/user/CPYOA/media/IMG_0782.jpg.html/[img]

The bronze cleat replaces the original stainless but is in the same place.  With the furling line led to that cleat from the block on the mid-ship stanchion (above the galley), it seemed in the way every time I went forward--or came aft--on the port side.  Now it's less in the way.

Hope that's of help in some way.  Let me know if any of this needs clarification.

Stay warm!
Bill
1997 CP27/2
Mathews, VA

skip1930

#12
Looks like wrong facebook code. And I see a problem with the 'beach-trees-blue sky' icon. Park your coursor on that and it should say 'insert image'. Click it.  Click on Modify message to make changes and fix this.

That's the icon next to the right of the 'red pin wheel'

I added spaces so I could show the set-up. You'll see the differences between what's correct and what's upcuffed.

This is wrong-->  [ img ]   / [ img ]   Should be --> [ img ]   [ / img ]  This what you'll see with the 'insert image' icon.



[ img ] * [ /img ] <-- copy paste the Photobucket Direct code where the * is.   I can't tell if the correct Photobucket code was used. I'll try yours.

Let's see what happens. Nope! ... Note if the Direct code is not correctly placed where the * is, you'll also get a black box with a white X in the box when you click post or save.  


... Not the correct code copied and pasted where the * goes. Hint: The correct code will end with  jpg

Here is my correct Direct Code from my Photobucket. Looks like this. http://i259.photobucket.com/albums/hh299/1930fordroadster/ATTO0001-1.jpg

Your Photobucket code looks like this.
http://s1125.photobucket.com/user/CPYOA/media/IMG_0783.jpg.html/

Take my Direct Code and copy paste it in where the * goes. And you'll see my Photobucket picture.



skip.



Steady1

Ahhhhh.  The icon's not the problem; nor is it placement; it's the source of the address.  The correct code / link is not the one at the top; it's over in the "Links to share this photo" box on the side.  Okay.  Got it.  One more time!

Here's the turning block:


Line to block, then up to cleat:

Right now, the line's slack; no tension on it 'cause the sail's off for the winter.

Long way to go.  Hope it's worth all your effort, Skip!
Bill
1997 CP27/2
Mathews, VA

skip1930

Anything to help out.

Kind of sort of looks like my set-up too.
And maybe some of our new members will benefit too.
It's not easy to post pics.

skip.