cyrano138 wrote:
...i've been getting a little paranoid lately because when i looked at the boat, before i bought it, i pulled out the drain plugs and noticed they were wet. it was raining that day, but i'm wondering if there's ever supposed to be any water in the hulls? if there are leaks in the hulls, are they difficult to fix?
There may have been some water in the hulls from a prior sail. It seems like there is always a little water in them after every sail. You should always leave the plugs out and the bows elevated to any water will drain after using. If you’re seeing a lot of water then you may have a leak that should be addressed. Mix up some water with liquid soap. Set up a vacuum cleaner so it blows and have someone hold it against the drain plug holes. Spray the soapy water on all the seams, pylons and bolt holes to see if you get any bubbles. If you do repair the leak.
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also, can anyone explain how i rig up the main sheet? i'm using a single block on each of the two bales on the boom, and a double block attached to the traveller. i just need to know where to start the sheet, which order and direction to use to run it through the blocks, and where to finish.
Take a look at the Hobie technical page and download the owners manual. You can probably figure it out on your own by setting up the boat and stringing it yourself. Start by running the sheet through the cam cleat on the lower block. Go to one of the singles, back to the double, back to the other single and tie off on the fairlead on the double. Your good as long as there’s no line crossovers.
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in the pictures i've seen, when people are hiking out, but not using a trapeze, they are both grabbing to sheets to keep from falling off the boat. which sheets are these that can be used for this purpose?
Don’t use the sheets as the primary thing to hold you in place while hiking out. That’s what the hiking straps on the tramp are for.
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also, i'd like to prop the mast on the rear end of the tramp frame when trailering, since it will save me some welding. there is a prop for the mast at the front of the trailer, but the rear one is fustigated, and i'd like ot just cut it off. someone here said already that it's safe for the tramp, but what is the absolute most economical way to secure it there? can i just use some solid bungees and cushion it with some beach towels ?
Use a throwable with some bungees.