Sum Tim Wong here.Anyone seen this before? What happened?
Sum Tim Wong here.I think the online manual you posted will be vety helpful. Thanks.sailboatmike wrote:I have just finished doing a winter refurb on my furler, the only thing that holds the top part of the furler in place is the blade or foil (grey plastic thing that the sail is attached too), the blade has a pin through it to hold it to the bottom furler unit.
THe furler unit and blade are free to run up the forestay and the amount they can move up and down this is limited by the space between the top of the foil and the swage.
The manual for the furler (http://www.sailcdi.com/flexible-furlers) says there should be a maximum of 1/4" free play between the top of the flade and the swage.
Also CHECK THE TURNBUCKLE under the furler unit, when mine came off I found that only the bottom thread had a seizing wire through it and the forestay was only connected by about three turns, I felt sick when I found I had been sailing like that. NEVER trust what a PO may of done, I have found things that are just sacrey and potentially not only stupid and could of caused expensive repairs but just dead set dangerous

Phil M wrote:I think I solved the 'problem'.The stainless steel cup is loose only because there's no tension on the forestay and the Furler is hanging loose. As soon as I put some tension by pulling down on the Furler, the stainless steel cup seems to be okay.
Maybe I'm becoming paranoid about something not working properly AGAIN.
I just checked and the luff support pin is still in place, held with a ring ding.Starscream wrote:
Maybe this will help: https://www.dropbox.com/s/9r1a2jyci2u9r ... .pptx?dl=0
I'm wondering if your luff support pin is gone?
I think this is because of how much space there is between the top of the luff and the swaged fitting on the top of the forestay. But the luff will actually ride up over the swage, okay, I know it will on mine, so you can actually lift the drum higher than 1/4"... That inch you were able to move it may be all there is on yours, but each one is slightly different because the luff is cut down from a longer piece on a boat-by-boat basis.sailboatmike wrote:I think in the manual it says the furler blade should be able to move up a maximum of 1/4 inch when on the boat, this will also let the drum assembly move up that much.
I reinstalled mine today and I have about 1 inch movement so I have to pull mine back off and put a spacer above the top of the blade to keep it in place properly
And changing the length of the forestay changes the clearance at the top. I had to redrill the hole for the pin when I stood the mast taller (less rake), as the foil ran out of room. It's supposed to sit on the pin, but I didn't feel like pulling it all apart, so I simply through-drilled for the pin once it was adjusted to my liking, and I clamped the foil with just a little clearance to the crimp at the top and drilled.vizwhiz wrote:. . . That inch you were able to move it may be all there is on yours, but each one is slightly different because the luff is cut down from a longer piece on a boat-by-boat basis.
My CDI furler was installed by the dealer. I have about 2 inches of space between the top fitting of the furler blade (luff) and the swage on the forestay.vizwhiz wrote:I think this is because of how much space there is between the top of the luff and the swaged fitting on the top of the forestay. But the luff will actually ride up over the swage, okay, I know it will on mine, so you can actually lift the drum higher than 1/4"... That inch you were able to move it may be all there is on yours, but each one is slightly different because the luff is cut down from a longer piece on a boat-by-boat basis.sailboatmike wrote:I think in the manual it says the furler blade should be able to move up a maximum of 1/4 inch when on the boat, this will also let the drum assembly move up that much.
I reinstalled mine today and I have about 1 inch movement so I have to pull mine back off and put a spacer above the top of the blade to keep it in place properly
