Notice:
The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ.
The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.
Thanks to all the previous great comments, I am ready to raise my boom 12" on the mast, for cockpit headroom. My mainsail has been altered by a Pensacola sail shop and I have the gooseneck slider from CD. But the slider and boom stops won't fit into the mast slot opening. I seem to have 3 choices: grind the opening slot wider, tilt the mast forward and slip everything in from the bottom of the mast or stay with the fixed boom and move it up 12". Any suggestions or advice is appreciated.
Are you sure you bought the correct gooseneck for the C25? It looks like the correct one is designated Part # E1694 Or, perhaps they sent you the wrong one.
Before you do any major surgery on your mast, I'd suggest you contact Catalina Direct and ask them why it doesn't fit the mast slot. It should.
Some added info (may or may not be pertinent). I have a 1989 Cat 25 TR. The slider that CD sent me looks exactly like Steve's picture. The opening slot (it is only large enough to get my mainsail slugs into) on my mast is only ground larger on the starboard side of the mast, not on both. The boat is 2hrs away from me, so pictures will take several days to post. The one sail stop that is in the slot looks to be the exact size as the stops I just bought and the slider slot diameter.
My 87 fixed boom sail slug slot is also only cut on one side and is very short. If the problem is that your slot is not long enough to insert the new slider or is not cut on both sides you can cut the slot longer and on both sides to be able to insert the gooseneck. No two Cat 25's have identical cuts and since yours was a fixed gooseneck there wasn't any reason for Catalina to cut a longer slot. It only had to be long enough for the slugs.
Hi Robert, we have the same mast and same issue. Every year we raise the mast and realize we didn't place the gooseneck, sail stop and pop-top latch into the mast slot. Then we undo the backstay, attach a block and tackle, undo the rear lowers, undo the furler and tilt the mast forward and insert the hardware.
This year we inserted a sail stop underneath the pop-top latch . . . so the gooseneck, sail stop #1, the pop top latch and sail stop #2 will stay on the mast - even during the off season.
Tilting the mast forward is easy, getting teased by the dock neighbors - well!
Not sure I would make the gate larger if it isn't absolutely necessary.
Notice: The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ. The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.