Richard1 wrote:
So 10 out of 10 boats require new standing rigging? As a noob to the H18 I'm serious in asking. But as a long time sailor on many different hull types I must question that satanding rigging be replace every x amount of years. Any knowledge you can impart I am most welcome. yarggh
I get a few calls a day from people that, "just got a new boat off of Cragslist for $300 ($500, $800, $1000, whatever)", and wonder if I'd take a look at it for them. Yes, 10 out of 10 boats off of CL need new rigging. I have yet to see a boat for under $1000 that has had its rigging replaced in the past 2 years. Has anyone else ever seen a boat with new rigging on CL for less than $1000?
I go into my standard safety spiel about spending the night in 52 degree water, boats getting washed up on rocks etc, etc, you need new rigging blah, blah, blah. Most of them listen, the ones that don't are just toying with disaster. I've got a mast here right now that I"m putting a new forestay on that I need to drill out the rivets in the jib hal pulley, telling me that the forestay at least has never been replaced since 1975. Looking at the single swaged shrouds, I assume the same for the shrouds, but they look fine to the customer, and the customer is always right. Toying with disaster if you ask me.
Deals off of ebay? People tell me all the time that they can save $5 off of ebay. So you mean you're going to trust your life to something made by some dude in his garage? Good luck with that. I've seen 3 new ebay shrouds fail right out of the box so far. And, geeez, why would anyone buy used rig off of Ebay, it's being sold for a reason. IT"S USED!
I work safety boat at a lot of regattas and get to see what fails and what it looks like when it fails. My shop is right on the beach and I get the pile of boat parts hauled up on the launch ramp when something goes wrong. I have been the 'guest expert' for Coast Guard and local Harbor Patrol, and have gone out on SARs, and seen it all go wrong.
Conversely, I've seen it all go right, a lot. There's nothing like flying a spin as high as you dare in Santa Cruz 20+, or being trapped out with a good friend while blasting along the lake... having a boat in good condition is a good place to start that kind of sail. Start ahead of the 8-ball, not behind it.
How often? Check your rig every time and replace it if you see anything funky. Hobie says every 2 years no matter what.
Bare minimum for your 18 without looking. You need new anchor pins.