Rick Westlake wrote:Kelly Hanson East wrote:...If you know your line is getting frayed or is old, it would be a cinch to replace it on trailer BEFORE IT BREAKS...
I'd just add one tiny refinement: Run the new line from the top down. Let gravity help you here.
(But I'm still glad I replaced mine with stainless-steel cable.)
As of yesterday, I'm no longer so sure ...
I lost the bolt through the centerboard on my way home, across the Chesapeake Bay, from St. Michaels. I discovered it when I pulled on the line and the eye-splice on the upper end of the cable pulled clear back to the cam-cleat.
When I dropped the pivot-fork, I found that the bolt was missing. My guess is that the lock-nut had backed off of the screw - which I use as a noun, but what this did to me becomes the verb, doesn't it?
I have replaced the bolt, but I noticed that the cable shows some corrosion and "meathooks" - especially around the lower eye-splice. This, despite the fact that I keep the boat up on its trailer between cruises - that is to say, at least 90% of the time.
When I replaced the bolt this time, I used a somewhat-longer screw - enough to show a couple of threads above the Nylock portion of the lock-nut - and I hammered down the end of the screw, enough (hopefully) to keep it from backing itself off for quite a while. But the thought of those meathooks on my new cable ... lead me to realize that I'll be replacing that cable sometime soon; and I'd better consider Sta-Set to the centerboard itself!
ALX, if that block doesn't interfere with lowering the mast - it's high on my list of "next mods". What block, from whom, did you use?