Rigging is generally a simple matter - you have standing rigging to keep the mast upright, and running rigging that controls the sails. Which bit is giving the trouble?
Basically all of it. Problem is this is my first yacht, and I didn't have a clue about the end result I was trying to achieve - how the sails/booms should move, how far they should move relative to the servo arm and each other, and what stopped the whole rig falling off.
The poorly translated and badly illustrated instructions just confused me, although they would probably be sufficient for an experienced sailor to work from. The most helpful thing was the pictures on the box, but even those were spoilt by having bits missing.
I found a diagram on this forum yesterday that explained the basics of yacht rigging, and the Dragonforce 65 instructions that were suggested on my other thread have filled in most of the blanks. I will have another go at it later today.
From what I can figure out, I need to tie the top of the mainsail to the front end of the backstay arm, then run the line to the end of the arm and down to the eye on the back of the deck. That will hold the mast in place and brace it.
The bottom corners of the mainsail are tied to the boom. One of the lines runs back to the middle of the boom, through a guide on the centre line, and then to the line (sheet?) that's connected to the servo arm.
The fore sail is hung from the mast, 2 lines connect the jib to the deck, and another line runs back to the servo arm. Looks like the jib should pivot about a point between the 2 lines that tie it to the deck? Or is the front line fixed, and the rear line running? This bit isn't that clear to me at this point.
A couple of overall line drawings in the instructions would have made it so much simpler.