frant said..
Actually Cisco I would go for a 2 to 1 halyard of 8mmm on your boat for the main halyard. More rope but you finish up with less weight aloft. I am probably a rope Nazi as I will not tolerate frayed, bleached, or poorly whipped and spliced lines. Step on a boat, look at lines and you can make an instant judgement of the owner!
I had 2:1 halyards on my second yacht which was a Spencer Adrian. Timber mast with external halyards.
All the halyards on Second Wind are internal so I don't think 2:1 halyards are possible. What I am considering is taking the main halyard (stbd side) and the port jib halyard away from the cockpit and onto winches that I fit to the mast. Due to the existing halyard exit positions and not wanting to weaken the mast with more exit slots, I would run the halyards from their existing exit slots down to the turning blocks at the mast base and back up to self tailing halyard winches.
I already have an Anderson 28 two speed self tailing winch that I bought a few years ago for $250 plus I have a pair of Barlow 16 or 18s the same as the existing winches back on the rear of my coach roof (single speed non self tailing).
The thought is to use the existing winches and clutches for reefing and trimming lines only and have dedicated halyard winches on the mast.
I have three larger turning blocks either side of the mast which carry spinnaker halyard, jib halyard and out haul port side and main halyard, other jib halyard and spinnaker pole topper stbd side. Two smaller turning blocks are shackled to stbd for boom topper and spin pole kicker as I recall.
There are no lines in the boom yet for the two mainsail reefs so some rearrangement at the mast base is definitely needed with two more turning blocks.
Stbd side clutches, control lines and winch.
And port side. Though smallish, these winches seem to be adequate for halyard tension on this yacht.