Re: M_Boats: Jib cleats - clam replacement
Doug, I'm curious...what happened to the cleats to make the inoperative? The only problem I've had with them is the cams get loose and the springs pop out of position. Braided line slips easier too so I prefer regular 3 strand. Bill
Bill, Vocabulary confusion - the Jam cleats are slipping and I want to switch to Cam cleats. Thanks Doug --- Wcpritchett@aol.com wrote:
Doug, I'm curious...what happened to the cleats to make the inoperative? The only problem I've had with them is the cams get loose and the springs pop out of position. Braided line slips easier too so I prefer regular 3 strand.
Bill _______________________________________________
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As I understand the nomenclature: a cam cleat has two spring-loaded toothy cams (egg-shaped) that swing open for the rope and then squeeze it. a clam cleat has two fixed toothy clam-halves (partially open "clam"); no moving parts. and a jam cleat is a horn cleat with a v-wedge under one of the horns; no moving parts. Busca has clam cleats for her jib sheets and a cam cleat for her main. Tod
I picked up Busca tonight from the fiberglass shop and she's looking mighty fine! The speedo thru-hull, the sink drain, and the bulkhead instrument holes are all filled and a couple of worn-and-poorly patched gelcoat spots on the hull where the bunks pressed are now looking like new. The sink thru-hull, aluminum tubing glassed in, looks good and he said it was tough to get out and that he had to cut from both inside the boat and outside. Curiously, the aluminum tube that is part of the sink is in poor shape, badly corroded. I think I should pull the hoses on the cockpit drains and inspect that tubing. I will at least carry wooden plugs to fit them. After looking at the wiring rat's nest again, I decided to start almost from scratch (like so many remodeling projects that seem to ever expand). There were at least two extra pairs of wire running up the compression post that had long since been disconnected from anything. When I'm done, it may not be any better, but at least it'll be a mess that I understand. Plus, I'll have a very similar arrangement on the Tartan; not much more complex. Unbeknownst to me, mud-daubers have obviously long held residence inside the compression post. I removed about a cup and a half of mud, some old, some housing live pupae. This weekend she gets new wiring and the new fishfinder installed and hopefully next week gets some new canvas. Tod Mills M17 #408 BuscaBrisas www.bright.net/~htmills
participants (3)
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Doug Kelch -
htmills@bright.net -
Wcpritchett@aol.com