Hi,
I am looking at my very old furler (1979 vintage), and trying to anticipate where it might fail. So, what's the collective experience of furler failures?
This raises what I have. I will describe it generically. It has a large (10 inch) diamter aluminum drum that is of split type. It rides on a large delrin (I believe) bearing - the bearing is new. It has asymetrical foils, made of aluminum, that are connected by splined torque links. All the torque links are new. The top foil has a head piece on it that supports the internal halyard (halyard runs in the foils). All in all it is a very simple system, and currently works. I am trying to figure out how and when this might fail (I know, when it's blowing very hard, and there are lots of waves....).
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I am not mentioning who made it as people confuse it with another unit from the same manufacturer that had a very troublesome halyard mechanism, which mine does not. So, to keep from just getting an "ok, that's junk" response based on thinking it's what it's not, I will wait until someone says they just have to know....
-David
Independence 31
Emerald
I am looking at my very old furler (1979 vintage), and trying to anticipate where it might fail. So, what's the collective experience of furler failures?
This raises what I have. I will describe it generically. It has a large (10 inch) diamter aluminum drum that is of split type. It rides on a large delrin (I believe) bearing - the bearing is new. It has asymetrical foils, made of aluminum, that are connected by splined torque links. All the torque links are new. The top foil has a head piece on it that supports the internal halyard (halyard runs in the foils). All in all it is a very simple system, and currently works. I am trying to figure out how and when this might fail (I know, when it's blowing very hard, and there are lots of waves....).
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I am not mentioning who made it as people confuse it with another unit from the same manufacturer that had a very troublesome halyard mechanism, which mine does not. So, to keep from just getting an "ok, that's junk" response based on thinking it's what it's not, I will wait until someone says they just have to know....
-David
Independence 31
Emerald