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![]() "Walt" wrote in message ... Rig tension looks about right to me - very loose when the boat is not actually under way. Why leave the rig under tension any longer than you need to? Because flex=fatigue. A rig left loose wears out faster as it flops around. Um. No. Sorry. Um. Yes. Indeed yes if the boat is afloat Perhaps you should ask Brion Toss. Be my guest. Phrase the question like this: "I've got a 505 that I dry sail from a launch dolly. Should I loosen the rig when I bring her ashore?" Here's the answer: Absolutely. With a dry sailed dinghy, you always slacken the rig once ashore. It takes the tension off the hull, which will fatigue if kept under load. Fatigue is failure of a component (in this case a wire) by reason of repeated cycles of stress which individually are below the elastic limit of the material. This happens if you leave the rigging slack while the boat is rocking about on a mooring. I knew a guy who did this and brand new rigging broke overnight as his mast twanged repeatedly at its rigging as the boat rolled (shock loads are about three times as stressful as steady loads). It is not fatigue if the hull slowly distorts under prolonged heavy loading. This is 'creep' of the hull material and if you must have a dinghy rigged that tightly then you should certainly slacken it up when you haul her ashore. |
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