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Not on my boom it doesn't. The forces appear at the clew...
Cheers JAXAshby wrote: right conclusion, wrong reasoning. hint: the net resultant load on a boom from a load at the end *is* at the end, which gives a long lever arm. the net resultant load on a boom from the _same_ load on a sail is at the center or effort on the sail, roughly where the vang attaches, which gives a short lever arm. From: Nav Date: 8/24/2004 7:23 PM Eastern Daylight Time Message-id: FYI: Now this may come as a surprise, but the boom is more likely to buckle if a rigid vang is used to lift a weight at the boom end than if the same load is upward (as applied by a sail). In the upward case the boom wall is being pulled out by the vang -an effect opposed by tension in the boom surface due to the bending moment. In the weight lifting case, the lower surface is in compression and is being pushed in by the vang so that wall buckling is far more likely. Cheers |