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Help with mast calculation
Hi folks,
Can anybody explain in very simple English the moment of inertia of a mast, and how the Ixx and Iyy numbers work - I am a little like Pooh Bear, I have a poor brain so any help is appreciated. A million grovelling thank you's in advance Pete |
Help with mast calculation
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. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "pete" wrote in message ... Hi folks, Can anybody explain in very simple English the moment of inertia of a mast, and how the Ixx and Iyy numbers work - I am a little like Pooh Bear, I have a poor brain so any help is appreciated. A million grovelling thank you's in advance Pete |
Help with mast calculation
Is this simply the moment of inertia of the mast and objects along it
or is it some kind of definition specific to yachts. Does it include the contribution due to sails and rigging? If not, moment of inertia is a fairly simple concept. If it is the simple physics definition, let me know and I'll show you how to estimate it (or even calculate for simple cases). |
Help with mast calculation
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. |
Help with mast calculation
OK, you asked for it. Prepare to be confused:
Mast design starts with the transverse righting moment. That is the force in foot pounds required to overcome the initial stability and heel the boat. It is usually measured at 30 degrees. 30 degrees is where the sail area perpendicular to the wind starts to reduce faster than the wind speed increases so it is about the point of maximum stress. The calculations require finding the center of gravity and the center of buoyancy and the metacenter at the heel angle. The Metacenter is the point at which a vertical line through the COB crosses the centerline of the hull. The horizontal distance between the COG and the COB is the lever arm. The righting moment is the mass * the acceleration of gravity (32'/s/s)* the lever arm. The actual mast section depends on the righting moment at 1 degree and 30 degrees, the number of spreaders, baby stays, runners and several other factors. I am not even going to try to get into that. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com wrote in message oups.com... Is this simply the moment of inertia of the mast and objects along it or is it some kind of definition specific to yachts. Does it include the contribution due to sails and rigging? If not, moment of inertia is a fairly simple concept. If it is the simple physics definition, let me know and I'll show you how to estimate it (or even calculate for simple cases). |
Help with mast calculation
Glenn,
That is an interesting way to express it. It sure would be is easier for a ordinary person to understand. I will have to remember that. It may save hundreds of bar napkins. Matt Colie Glenn Ashmore wrote: OK, you asked for it. Prepare to be confused: Mast design starts with the transverse righting moment. That is the force in foot pounds required to overcome the initial stability and heel the boat. It is usually measured at 30 degrees. 30 degrees is where the sail area perpendicular to the wind starts to reduce faster than the wind speed increases so it is about the point of maximum stress. The calculations require finding the center of gravity and the center of buoyancy and the metacenter at the heel angle. The Metacenter is the point at which a vertical line through the COB crosses the centerline of the hull that is inclined (when upright the two are coliniar) .. The horizontal distance between the COG and the COB is the lever arm. The righting moment is the mass * the acceleration of gravity (32'/s/s)* the lever arm. The actual mast section depends on the righting moment at 1 degree and 30 degrees, the number of spreaders, baby stays, runners and several other factors. I am not even going to try to get into that. |
Help with mast calculation
On Thu, 13 Oct 2005 11:50:11 -0400, "Glenn Ashmore"
wrote: OK, you asked for it. Prepare to be confused: Mast design starts with the transverse righting moment. That is the force in foot pounds required to overcome the initial stability and heel the boat. It is usually measured at 30 degrees. 30 degrees is where the sail area perpendicular to the wind starts to reduce faster than the wind speed increases so it is about the point of maximum stress. The calculations require finding the center of gravity and the center of buoyancy and the metacenter at the heel angle. The Metacenter is the point at which a vertical line through the COB crosses the centerline of the hull. The horizontal distance between the COG and the COB is the lever arm. The righting moment is the mass * the acceleration of gravity (32'/s/s)* the lever arm. That's pretty much exactly what I was after, thanks. I don't need to work out the maths myself, I just wanted to understand the why and wherefore. The actual mast section depends on the righting moment at 1 degree and 30 degrees, the number of spreaders, baby stays, runners and several other factors. I am not even going to try to get into that. That I understand perfectly, Gosh this newsgroup is useful isn't it? Many thanks, Pete |
Help with mast calculation
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Help with mast calculation
Even with all the righting moment calculations spar sections for a given
mast height tend to fall in a fairly narrow range. A competent designer can calculate the requirements very closely but the spar makers tend to put in more safety margin and you are practically limited to the available sections. Here is a "rule of thumb" for aluminum masts from Dave Gerr's book you might use as a double check.: For a single spreader rig the transverse mast section should be about 1/90 of the length from cabin top to masthead. The fore and aft section should be about 1.4 times the transverse section and the thickness of the aluminum should be about 1/35 of the transverse section. Double spreaders reduce the required transverse section by 10 to 15% but not the fore and aft or thickness. Heavy displacement and blue water boats might go up 5 to 10% in all dimensions. The only way to drastically reduce the weight of a spar is to go carbon but brace yourself. After I got a price for composite spars at the Annapolis show I went directly to Pussers for a #4 painkiller. :-) -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com Thanks, I don't really want to calculate it myself, I'm trying to understand the correlation between figures given to me by the architecht, and the tree trunk mast sections that the mast suppliers want to give to me. |
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