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Nacra 5.0 downhaul rigging

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(@flyingfishguy)
Posts: 58
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Topic starter
 
[#2107]

Does anyone know what the pulley with the cam cleat on it at the base of this mast is called? And where to get one?

Thanks,
Jimmy


 
Posted : June 22, 2011 3:25 pm
David Bonin
(@wolfman)
Posts: 1555
Member
 

That is a pivot block with cam cleat. You can get them at pretty much any sail shop. Here is one at Murray's marine on-line. http://www.murrays.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Product_Code=28-0291&Category_Code=C-BL&Store_Code=MS . Just so you know that is not a stock downhaul setup for a 5.0. Usually it is either rigged with a single block and becket with a v-jam cleat near where that pivot block is or use a fiddle block to give 4:1 purchase. YOu could rig it the same as in the picture and use a cheaper v-jam block on the mast. With only 4:1 the amount of downhaul you can apply on the fly will be pretty limited so being able to adjust it on the tramp isn't critical.


 
Posted : June 22, 2011 4:56 pm
Ron
 Ron
(@nacra55)
Posts: 627
Chief Registered
 

Could be
H140 Pivoting exit/150 Cam-Matic*
or
H141 Pivoting exit/365 Carbo-Cam*
or
H291 Pivoting Exit/423 Carbo-Cam*

Not sure which one you have.

APS, Murrys, West, Key Sailing


 
Posted : June 22, 2011 4:58 pm
(@flyingfishguy)
Posts: 58
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Topic starter
 

Great, thanks for the info.

I was wondering how much purchase would be necessary for adequate on-the-fly downhaul adjustment? 5:1, 6:1, more?

Thanks again!


 
Posted : June 23, 2011 2:43 am
David Bonin
(@wolfman)
Posts: 1555
Member
 

If you have the original rig then the only purpose of the downhaul is to tension the sail and remove wrinkles. This allows it to form a solid wing shape while sailing instead of tending to collapse and allowing the draft to move randomly.

A high purchase downhaul is meant so you can bend the mast backward along its major (thick) axis. What this does is take shape out of the sail flattening it and depowering it. Basically the luff of a sail is curved so that when it is put on a straight mast it bows out to the side forming an aerodynamic wing shape. When you put bend in the mast that conforms to the luff curve, the 3D shape of the sail is reduced. It is actually more complicated than this but that is the easiest way to picture it.

On a modern cat (post 1999) the normal downhaul is about 8:1, some have as much as 16:1. In order to be able to take advantage of this your boat has to be equiped with several things.
- a modern sail (i.e. one with a large reinforced bolt rope) designed for high downhaul, old sails will likely rip
- swept back spreaders to allow you to put rearward tension (prebend) into the mast, otherwise the mast will bend sideways
- a ring lock halyard connectin at the top casting, a wire with bullet and fork arrangement will slip when you haul on it.

If you don't already have all these things, just stick with the 4:1 downhaul. The upgrades are very pricey and to be honest unless you are racing they probably aren't worth it. With that downhaul and loose diamond wires (i.e. tensioned to the manual specs so you can just press them to the mast about 12" above the turnbuckles - not really loose) the sideways bend in the mast and mainsheet can provide adequate flattening for most conditions.

Regards,
Dave


 
Posted : June 23, 2011 3:12 am
(@flyingfishguy)
Posts: 58
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Topic starter
 

Done, thanks! Take the rest of the day off.


 
Posted : June 23, 2011 4:27 am
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