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Any ideas?
I have a 20 foot Tornado cat and I have to go under two low bridges to get to open water where I can put the mast up. I can make a bracket to mount a small motor on the rear cross beam and motor under the bridges, but how to get the mast up afterwards?? Thanks in advance! Earl White |
#2
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On Sun, 4 Feb 2007 12:33:13 -0500, EW wrote
(in article . com): Any ideas? I have a 20 foot Tornado cat and I have to go under two low bridges to get to open water where I can put the mast up. I can make a bracket to mount a small motor on the rear cross beam and motor under the bridges, but how to get the mast up afterwards?? Thanks in advance! Earl White Stick the mast into the mud then turn the boat over on it? -- Mundo, The Captain who is a bully and an ass |
#3
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"EW" wrote in message
ups.com... Any ideas? I have a 20 foot Tornado cat and I have to go under two low bridges to get to open water where I can put the mast up. I can make a bracket to mount a small motor on the rear cross beam and motor under the bridges, but how to get the mast up afterwards?? Thanks in advance! Earl White Leverage? -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#4
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Depending on the required clearance, and depending on the sort of mast
step you have, you could partially lower your mast over the bows using the boom as a gin pole. All you have to do is use the trap wires as temporary stays secured to the ends of the front beam. Attach the main halyard from the mast tip to the end of the boom. Tighten the sheet. Release the shrouds. Ease the main sheet and push the mast forward and lower it as needed. You might have to drop purchase (go from 8:1 to 4:1, for example) from the main sheet system to lower the mast enough (to keep from running out of sheet). Note that some cats, such as the Viva 27, use this technique to step the mast, but if you lower the mast past 45 degrees, you definitely need a boom bridle from the boom tip to the forward beam to keep the mast from tipping sideways. If you have an older Tornado with a "superstep", i expect you can lower the mast to 45 degrees this way, reducing the height by about 30%. If you have a Marstrom Tornado, I doubt you could lower very much with their minimalist mast step system. You might want to solicit additional advice on the "Tornadocat" yahoo group. --Glenn Brown (1971 Panthercraft Tornado + Spinnaker) |
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