Sailing yesterday in gusts to about 16 mph my jib kept lifting the jib sheet up out of it's cleat.
Since I was singling in gusts strong enough to dip the gunwales, I had to keep one hand on the mainsheet to avoid a bath and the other on the tiller.
I tried tying the controlling leeward jibsheet up on the windward jib car, but that made course changes very clumsy and slow, and eventually settled for adding in a bit of pullback with the leeward jibsheet to hold the jib's clew close in which was also a complication.
As the gusts would heel the boat, the wind would lift the jib up a bit and it would come loose.
The clamcleats had to be replaced and the new ones are kinda slick, so that may be a contributing factor.
Anyone else had this happen, and is there a solution besides adding a fairlead ahead of the jib cleat??
Thanks for the reply, when I read it the lights went on and I realized that I was supposed to be using the fairlead for something besides a "handle" LOL
Well, ain't I just the mechanical genius, huh?? My gramps would be quite embarrassed for me, he actually was a self-taught metallurgist who did real well at it.
I had mentally crossed up the instructions in the C14 handbook (page34-35) where it suggest removing the guide strap atop the cam cleat -- just read it quick and thought it was referring to the fairlead. Couldn't quite figure out how the jibsheet was going to be getting snagged on it so I just read on past.
Man, I appreciate this forum, and I hope someone gets as good a chuckle out of this as I'm having...