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Many thanks for your response Glenn. I do have a set of figures from
the architect, but all the mast manufacturers want to give me a mast that I feel is far heavier and stiffer than I would prefer for my type of sailing. Obviously I am not going to argue with the architect or the mast suppliers, but I just wanted to have an idea of the whole concept (about which I have no knowledge at all) so I can maybe get the mast I want without compromising any of the architects intentions - well not too much anyway! To make it a bit tougher for me I'm trying doing this in French, so I'm struggling a bit to make sure I am completely understood and I completely understand them. "Knowledge is everything" is never more true then when your a stranger in a strange land. I have a seven page questionnaire from the manufacturers full of technical terms that would make my head ache in English let alone French! Thanks, Pete On Thu, 13 Oct 2005 07:57:32 -0400, "Glenn Ashmore" wrote: There is no simple explanation. Brion Toss's "Rigger's Apprentice" and Dave Gerr's "Nature of Boats" have a fairly straight forward explanation. Both have charts to help you estimate the RM. Larsson & Eliasson "Principles of Yacht Design" has a much more complete explanation but requires more math. Read all three in that order and you will have a pretty good grasp of the subject. Best way to get accurate numbers is to send your hull dimensions to a spar maker and ask them to specify a mast. They all have computer programs that can crank out a report in seconds. |