vreference wrote:
I've had my new-to-me '81 out twice now, both times I've peeled the skin off my fingers with the halyard and, after warping the halyard around a tool to attempt to hook without further destroying my hands, given up and just tied it off.
Does everyone use gloves or am I missing something? Also - any finer points of getting the sail hooked? I always try and rotate the mast clockwise but I can't even see it to tell if it's close; maybe I'll try and find some binoculars next time.
Yes, raising the main is a freakin' bear. My hands would be hamburger without the use of work gloves. I do my best to follow Matt Miller's instructions to the letter but when you're working with a 25-year-old main like I am, you're likely to encounter some additional friction when raising the main (wear along the bolt rope, etc.). Two things that made a world of difference for me (FWIW) were: 1. releasing some tension from the battens and 2. lubing the bolt rope and mast sail track with a couple of coats of "Sailkote". I also received a recommendation from one of the old hands who posts here that I should swap out the large diameter halyard that came with my boat with "skinnier" Ocean 3000 Dyneema line in the 5MM size. Evidently, a thicker halyard will rub on the bolt rope inside the mast, causing yet more unnecessary friction. (The halyard that came with my boat is quite a bit thicker than all of the the other Hobie halyards on my beach. I really need to swap it out)
As for hooking and unhooking the main, I have yet to encounter a problem with this. After raising the main to the point where I think it is high enough to hook up, I typically step back off the boat, catch my breath and have a look-see at the location of the halyard ring. If it looks high enough, I use one hand to rotate the mast clockwise and another hand to tension the downhaul to see if it is hooked. If yes, good to go. If not, raise the sail some more and repeat.