[Rhodes22-list] Thanks for the welcome - Replacing the IMF control line on an '86 - Short bio
Art Czerwonky
a_czerwonky at yahoo.com
Tue May 19 20:01:16 EDT 2020
The sage advice in the replies you have is priceless, and entirely correct. You need the sail "tube" extended below the mast base to see and thread thru the hole, which I am sure you are seeing. In any case smart to get confirmation from fleet experience. Now be sure to listen for that plunk......
Best,Art
Sent from Yahoo Mail on Android
On Tue, May 19, 2020 at 7:10 PM, Charles Nieman<blue66corvette at hotmail.com> wrote: Larry
I’m afraid your are going to have to drop the mast. It can be done on the water, the only down side is not really knowing what made that “plunk” sound until it’s too late
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Charles Nieman
98 R 22
s/v Daydreams
> On May 19, 2020, at 3:57 PM, Larry Gioia via Rhodes22-list <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org> wrote:
>
> Thanks to everyone for being so welcoming - seems like a great group.
> The Sea Scouts that I bought my '86 R22 from replaced the control line on the inner-furling mast assembly with a line that's too thick (gets caught up in the mechanism as it gets to the 2nd winding) and too short (too short to thread through the boom as it should). Does anyone have experience with replacing it? I'm referring to the line that wraps around the bottom of the mast, you pull on it to furl the mainsail in. I'm hoping not to have to take down the mast to do it since the boat is in the water at a dock. it looks like it goes through a hole in the mast near the bottom with a stopper knot to hold it.
> Short bio: Merchant Marine to Wall Street IT. I'm a '79 Marine Engineering grad from SUNY Maritime College in the Bronx - sailed with Exxon on oil tankers for 5 years that went East Coast, Gulf Coast, Panama Canal, California, Alaska. Went to Columbia for an MBA, and worked in Wall St. Technology. The firm I worked for got bought so I now run a small company with a half-dozen people that provides mortgage-bond data to investment firms, but my real fun is volunteering on the American Victory, a 1944 Victory ship in Tampa. http://www.americanvictory.org You'll find me in the engine room there at times - that's my favorite place. I'm not a racing type sailor, more of a lazy afternoon sailor. Not political, I prefer watching Hallmark movies.
> Thanks!
> Larry
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