That's right; the line actually pulls the cringle forward as well as down
and that keeps the luff of the sail close to the mast.  There's a little
resistance but not that much really but you do need the winch to use the
line as a Cunningham.  I have never used the second reef so it is not rigged
although my boom is set up for it, just need to reinstall the second line

 

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From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of David
Knecht
Sent: January 2, 2014 4:43 PM
To: CnC CnC discussion list
Subject: Re: Stus-List Reefing the main

 

Hi Dwight- I am presuming the double padeye setup is to prevent what Andy
described?  It would put some forward pull on the cunningham to resist the
rearward pull of the outhaul.  I had not thought about that problem and that
is why this list is so great!  Glad I did not test it in difficult
conditions.  The only thing I might do different from your setup is to put a
block on the second padeye.  I can't imagine pulling that line through the
cringle and padeye is very efficient, but I guess with a winch doing the
pulling you can get the job done. Also, I can't see a way to easily to to
the second reef point with this setup, so perhaps that one could use the
horns.  Dave

 

On Jan 2, 2014, at 3:18 PM, dwight <dwight...@gmail.com> wrote:





David

 

I have my boat rigged for reefing from the cockpit with what I call a "high"
Cunningham.  I will try to describe what I have done.  The end of a length
of 3/8 braid is retsrained with a figure 8 knot on the bottom side of a pad
eye mounted horizontally on the port side of the mast below the boom and
slightly forward.  That lines runs up through the first reef cringle and
from there down through another pad eye on the stbd side of the mast mounted
directly opposite to the one on the port side and from there to a block at
the base of the mast and then to a turning block (deck organizer) on deck to
a Lewmar clutch and then to a number 10 barient winch.  The clew is rigged
much the same as you describe.  Works great for reefing from the cockpit and
functions well to tighten the luff as a Cunningham when not reefed.  This
setup has functioned trouble free for me for many years and it does not
present any problems at the end of the day when the time comes to pack the
main away.

 

 

 

 

David Knecht

Aries

1990 C&C 34+

New London, CT




 

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