There should be a spare jib halyard on a 17, as the CDI has a dedicated (de-cored?) halyard. I use the spare halyard shackled to the aft hole for mast raising, so there must be clearance between the line and the furler I shackle to the center hole.. I have tried to wrap my CDI up to handkerchief size in stiff winds, and something (too high center of effort?) keeps it from pulling as close to the wind as I would like. I have not owned that many boats, but it seems that the 17 is more dependent on the jib than some other species. On Mar 29, 2012, at 5:32 PM, jerry montgomery wrote:
Why can't you get a wire luff on it and set it flying just inside of the furler? I don't remember how many holes there are in the bowpiece of the 15, but if there aren't three you can drill another, and tack it to the third hole. You would need to either drop the furled jib or set up another halyard- a spinnaker halyard would do if you have any interest in a spinnaker, even tho it would chafe on the forestay. You wouldn't use it enough to matter unless you were headed for Cape Horn!.
jerry ----- Original Message ----- From: "Joe Murphy" <seagray@embarqmail.com> To: "For and about Montgomery Sailboats" <montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 5:23 PM Subject: Re: M_Boats: M17 Storm Sails
Jerry, Thanks for the tip. I have the CDI furler. Any suggestions on how to deploy the storm jib??? Thks, Joe ----- Original Message ----- From: jerry montgomery To: For and about Montgomery Sailboats Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 6:32 PM Subject: Re: M_Boats: M17 Storm Sails
Joe- the storm jib is on the sailplan, which Harry and judy have. It's pretty small but works great. You can sail upwind with the storm jib and a single-reefed main in a 25 knot wind and point hi and go like crazy.
jerry ----- Original Message ----- From: "Joe Murphy" <seagray@embarqmail.com> To: "For and about Montgomery Sailboats" <montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com> Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 1:58 PM Subject: M_Boats: M17 Storm Sails
Does anyone have a storm sail? If so, where did you get it and how much did you pay for it? How do you fly it? Do you have a separate track? Boy, that sounds pretty nosey of me. Thanks Joe SeaFrog ----- Original Message ----- From: W David Scobie To: For and about Montgomery Sailboats Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2012 4:23 PM Subject: Re: M_Boats: M15 Foresail Size??
the jib currently made by Elliot/Pattison Sailmakers for the M15 is 128%. get a jib the size that E/P is now making.
for your quoted wind speeds, as you stated, a second reef point is nice insurance. in my opinion (IMO) you should tuck in a second reef when the wind goes about 17/18 knots on the M15. once the wind gets above the low-ish 20s you need a smaller jib.
:: Dave Scobie :: former M15 owner - www.freewebs.com/m15-named-scred :: M17 #375 SWEET PEA - www.m17-375.webs.com :: Sage Marine - www.sagemarine.com
--- On Thu, 3/29/12, Jeffrey Johnston <frjeff@gmail.com> wrote:
If I'm to order new main and jib for my Monty 15 (which I'm likely to do soon):
What size range (100%, 110%, 120%, etc) jib makes the most sense. I believe the boat came standard with a 100%. I can only afford one jib at present.
My sailing will be primarily near shore Great Lakes (Lake Huron, Tawas Bay, North Channel, Georgian Bay) and smaller inland lakes. I'm guessing my winds typically to be 5-18 MPH. My main will have two reefs.
Thanks for any and all advice.
*Jeff+* Molōn labe!
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