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Reaching struts on Hunters ?
Bergstrom & Ridder have been designing rigs since 1972. The patented
characteristics of a B&R rig are the diagonal diamonds, in lieu of running back stays, and swept back spreaders with a small mast section. This rig was first seen on Thursday's Child, built in 1983. That B&R rig was incorporated as a masthead rig with back stay on all subsequent Hunters. In 1989, Thursday's Child was re- fit with a fractional B&R rig with no backstay, a precursor of all the new Hunter rigs. B&R designs have been incorporated into Hunters for the past 21 years, first through Isomat, then some other fabricators, and now Seldon On Fri, 21 May 2004 10:26:29 -0400, DSK wrote: I wouldn't call that a B&R rig, for one things it's a masthead with a backstay. It's got some of the elements of the B&R though, kind of a *******ized stepchild. With the standing backstay, it can't have a big roachy mainsail, with the wide double spreaders it can't set a genoa properly. No wonder you thought it was a horrible rig. This looks like it has all the B&R faults and none of the benefits. What were they thinking? Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
Reaching struts on Hunters ?
Actually, the design paramaters for the B&R rig preclude any kind of
on the fly adjustments so dear to the racing sailor or compulsive tweaker. Its set it and forget it, what you see is what you got. As for the older B&R designs, you couldn't use a backstay tensioner. If you cranked down on the back stay, you loosened the diagonals (not good) On Thu, 20 May 2004 13:59:35 -0400, Glenn Ashmore wrote: Marc wrote: Its a pair of struts to handle the loading at the gooseneck and transfer it to the chainplates. That's right. The newer Hunters have adapted the B&R rig from the Hunter's Child. Chopped a lot of weight aloft by reducing the mast section, adding mast support struts, deep swept spreaders reverse diagonals and jumpers on some. It does save weight but adds a lot of windage, causes a lot of chafe on the main down wind and is impossible to adjust headstay tension. |
Reaching struts on Hunters ?
Marc wrote:
Bergstrom & Ridder have been designing rigs since 1972. The patented characteristics of a B&R rig are the diagonal diamonds, in lieu of running back stays, and swept back spreaders with a small mast section .. I'd have guessed it was the other way around. I.e., the swept-back spreaders compensate for the lack of runners, and that the characteristic "diamond shrouds" keep the mast "in column" athwartships without the use of conventional twin lowers. That'd be my _first_ guess in any case. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://kerrydeare.home.comcast.net/ |
Reaching struts on Hunters ?
You are correct. I got twisted around.
On Fri, 21 May 2004 14:10:46 -0400, "Armond Perretta" wrote: Marc wrote: Bergstrom & Ridder have been designing rigs since 1972. The patented characteristics of a B&R rig are the diagonal diamonds, in lieu of running back stays, and swept back spreaders with a small mast section .. I'd have guessed it was the other way around. I.e., the swept-back spreaders compensate for the lack of runners, and that the characteristic "diamond shrouds" keep the mast "in column" athwartships without the use of conventional twin lowers. That'd be my _first_ guess in any case. |
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