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#11
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Allen,
Is the cover open along the bottom ? Are the two sides connected just where the slides are attached ? It must at least be open where the reef lines attach to the boom I'd think. "bushman" wrote in message m... Why I like my MackPack. I feel the same way about the lines and cover messing up my air flow across the sail, but we aint racing here, we're cruising and enjoying ouselves. I think the MackPack is good for the sail. The sail stays in the lines and does not hang on other objects or fall to the deck to be snagged or stepped on. Being tightly furled and sinched down is not good for the sail cloth, being loosely flaked on the boom keeps the cloth and stiching from being creased. Also the sail can breath and dry out in the sail cover. Interesting thing I learned at the Sail show this weekend. Travis Blain of Mack Sails told me to box up my old MackPack and send $53 to have any repairs done. I will report back when it returns. - Allen P.S. maybe I am just a lazy sailor. |
#12
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![]() "Garland Gray II" wrote in message news:GN3df.237$0h5.168@dukeread10... Allen, Is the cover open along the bottom ? Are the two sides connected just where the slides are attached ? It must at least be open where the reef lines attach to the boom I'd think. Mine has three , two inch webbing straps that slip between the sail and the boom , attaching to the other side with little half turn buckle. The two halves are only sewn together at the aft end of the 16' zipper. The webbing holds the bottom together under the foot , the zipper closes the top , and the front hangs on hooks screwed into the mast. The reefing lines can go under or over the cover and around the boom or under the foot to take some of the belly out of the sail. - Allen |
#13
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Thanks !
"bushman" wrote in message ... "Garland Gray II" wrote in message news:GN3df.237$0h5.168@dukeread10... Allen, Is the cover open along the bottom ? Are the two sides connected just where the slides are attached ? It must at least be open where the reef lines attach to the boom I'd think. Mine has three , two inch webbing straps that slip between the sail and the boom , attaching to the other side with little half turn buckle. The two halves are only sewn together at the aft end of the 16' zipper. The webbing holds the bottom together under the foot , the zipper closes the top , and the front hangs on hooks screwed into the mast. The reefing lines can go under or over the cover and around the boom or under the foot to take some of the belly out of the sail. - Allen |
#14
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This thread has had several responses which I'll not repeat here, but I
wanted to ask about some issues I have with mine. First, in the case of the grommets, I've put knots in the inner section, the better to hold up the sides, or otherwise, it's not over the sail when it's dropped. So, for mine, it's not held up by friction. Something akin to a slab is needed, at least in my application, to make it happen. Second, if I don't have the jacks pretty well tensioned, the sail will fall off to one side or the other when it's in the bag, so to speak - so, I keep it tensioned, having an already-somewhat-abraded bimini over the bows, just from the time it's spent in the yard/on the hard. However, third, I'm about to build our awning/sunshade setup, which will, of course, require the slacking/run-forward of the jacks for installation. Aside from cinching down (recommended against by another poster) of the total bag, how do you keep your sail from falling off? Other than those items, we like ours very much. Ours is currently attached to the mast, so when I'm up there doing other stuff related to the electrical bits, I'll move them to the spreaders, a huge improvement, I'm sure, in dropping. FWIW, when we bought the boat, it had sail-tie tape on the main, just as you'd do with a put-over-the-sail covering system - perhaps because the mackpack itself was pretty well shot, it appeared. However, off it came, and some mending later, it's fine. I see no reason to believe that, if one had the concept, building your own couldn't be an easy project for someone with the appropriate sewing machine (which we've just bought from Sailrite, in our case, so ours will be a replacement at some point, but the awnings are current project material!). I highly recommend it. L8R Skip and Lydia Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig - Callsign Pending! http://tinyurl.com/384p2 The vessel as Tehamana, as we bought her "Believe me, my young friend, there is *nothing*-absolutely nothing-half so much worth doing as simply messing, messing-about-in-boats; messing about in boats-or *with* boats. In or out of 'em, it doesn't matter. Nothing seems really to matter, that's the charm of it. Whether you get away, or whether you don't; whether you arrive at your destination or whether you reach somewhere else, or whether you never get anywhere at all, you're always busy, and you never do anything in particular; and when you've done it there's always something else to do, and you can do it if you like, but you'd much better not." |
#15
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Hi Skip,
Thanks for the comments. I assume it is the "lazy jacks-thru-the-grommets" that dictate that the system is sold only with its own lazy jacks rather than trying to fit to existing lazy jacks. Since I already have lazy jacks I've wondered how the systemwould work w/o threading the 'jacks thru grommets, but it sounds like you wouldn't think it'd work. Keeping the sail from flopping over is a concern of mine also. It was suggested to me to thread small blocks or even shackles or rings on the topping lift, one for each batten. A light line is tied between each ring and the end of each battenso that when the sail is dropped, the line is tight. This would keep the battens closer to the boom. I have done this only with the bottom batten, and I guess it helped, so I should continue with the others. "Skip Gundlach" wrote in message oups.com... This thread has had several responses which I'll not repeat here, but I wanted to ask about some issues I have with mine. First, in the case of the grommets, I've put knots in the inner section, the better to hold up the sides, or otherwise, it's not over the sail when it's dropped. So, for mine, it's not held up by friction. Something akin to a slab is needed, at least in my application, to make it happen. Second, if I don't have the jacks pretty well tensioned, the sail will fall off to one side or the other when it's in the bag, so to speak - so, I keep it tensioned, having an already-somewhat-abraded bimini over the bows, just from the time it's spent in the yard/on the hard. However, third, I'm about to build our awning/sunshade setup, which will, of course, require the slacking/run-forward of the jacks for installation. Aside from cinching down (recommended against by another poster) of the total bag, how do you keep your sail from falling off? Other than those items, we like ours very much. Ours is currently attached to the mast, so when I'm up there doing other stuff related to the electrical bits, I'll move them to the spreaders, a huge improvement, I'm sure, in dropping. FWIW, when we bought the boat, it had sail-tie tape on the main, just as you'd do with a put-over-the-sail covering system - perhaps because the mackpack itself was pretty well shot, it appeared. However, off it came, and some mending later, it's fine. I see no reason to believe that, if one had the concept, building your own couldn't be an easy project for someone with the appropriate sewing machine (which we've just bought from Sailrite, in our case, so ours will be a replacement at some point, but the awnings are current project material!). I highly recommend it. L8R Skip and Lydia Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig - Callsign Pending! http://tinyurl.com/384p2 The vessel as Tehamana, as we bought her "Believe me, my young friend, there is *nothing*-absolutely nothing-half so much worth doing as simply messing, messing-about-in-boats; messing about in boats-or *with* boats. In or out of 'em, it doesn't matter. Nothing seems really to matter, that's the charm of it. Whether you get away, or whether you don't; whether you arrive at your destination or whether you reach somewhere else, or whether you never get anywhere at all, you're always busy, and you never do anything in particular; and when you've done it there's always something else to do, and you can do it if you like, but you'd much better not." |
#16
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"Garland Gray II" wrote in message
news:7udef.2202$0h5.1602@dukeread10... Hi Skip, Thanks for the comments. I assume it is the "lazy jacks-thru-the-grommets" that dictate that the system is sold only with its own lazy jacks rather than trying to fit to existing lazy jacks. Since I already have lazy jacks I've wondered how the systemwould work w/o threading the 'jacks thru grommets, but it sounds like you wouldn't think it'd work. Keeping the sail from flopping over is a concern of mine also. It was suggested to me to thread small blocks or even shackles or rings on the topping lift, one for each batten. A light line is tied between each ring and the end of each battenso that when the sail is dropped, the line is tight. This would keep the battens closer to the boom. I have done this only with the bottom batten, and I guess it helped, so I should continue with the others. I see no reason not to use your existing jacks. The MP has two grommets in line with the jackline, near the top of the slab, allowing enough room for the zipper to work. The line goes through the outside, top, then the inside, bottom, coming out again. The knot I put in is in between the grommets. So, if you were making your own, just cut and sew everything other than the grommets. Allow enough to have the zipper meet comfortably, and soap-mark that line. Hold the sunbrella slab in position on a slab-stacked sail, with the jacks tight, and mark the line the jacks take. Insert grommets, untie jackline, thread, knot, retie jack, and you've done it. As to your modus of keeping the sail upright, it's interesting to me - sounds like a variation on the dutchman system. I'll have to give that a look, as I'd rather not have to keep the jacks tight, or, conversely, when the awning is up, try to figure out how to keep it up. Oh, dang. Forgot - the topping lift would also have to be pulled forward, or the shade won't fit. That, or I'd have to make two of them, complicating the anticipated rolled-up storage against the front of the mast... L8R Skip -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig http://tinyurl.com/384p2 The vessel as Tehamana, as we bought her "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |