| | | | | "Stephen A. Campbell" wrote:
> Like I said, it's not that big of a deal, just an oddity to report.
> And seeing that I'm not the only one helps. They don't cause that much of a
> problem, just the ratlines don't seat as securely as they should. I'll live,
> but I might have to keel-haul somebody to assuage my dissapointment.
*** SACRILEGE ALERT *** SACRILEGE ALERT ***
Have you considered taking a file or something to the mast base, to put in
notches in the correct places? I have, but I haven't gotten around to doing
it yet. Anyone tried this yet? How did it work?
J
| | | | | | | | | | | | | Jeff Johnston wrote:
> "Stephen A. Campbell" wrote:
>
> > Like I said, it's not that big of a deal, just an oddity to report.
> > And seeing that I'm not the only one helps. They don't cause that much of a
> > problem, just the ratlines don't seat as securely as they should. I'll live,
> > but I might have to keel-haul somebody to assuage my dissapointment.
>
> *** SACRILEGE ALERT *** SACRILEGE ALERT ***
>
> Have you considered taking a file or something to the mast base, to put in
> notches in the correct places? I have, but I haven't gotten around to doing
> it yet. Anyone tried this yet? How did it work?
Another, possibly better, possibility: Mount the base on a 2x2 or 4x4 turntable.
This will add height, but if you can compensate for the ratline height it should
solve the problem.
best
LFB
| | | | | | |