| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
WaIIy wrote:
On Sat, 15 Jan 2005 14:47:58 GMT, "Jim," wrote: BillP wrote: When we bought the boat there were only a few wedges in place, not enough for proper support. I understand how the SparTite system works but is there another system that would work? Say just filling the partner with silicon, would this allow to much flexing? How firm is the SparTite after it sets?, does it allow some movement or does it harden as a solid rubber? One of the guys in my YC seals the mast opening with a piece of line jammed into place (ater adjusting the stays to give him proper rake), then coats it with silicone. Since we have to drop the mast every year for haulout, it seems to work well for him Which brings me to a question. I know next to nothing about sailboats and I notice in a marina near me (Cleveland) that some of the sailboats take down the mast for winter and some don't. Regarding the nuisance of taking the mast down, I would not like to have my boat close to someone who did keeps the mast up, and is toppled over by a strong wind. (In our harbour, everybody who uses a plastic tarp lost theirs in the storm we had just before Christmas. I also saw some tarp supports blown over, not to speak of small craft that were blown partly from their supports). Another thing is, if you leave the mast up, you have to loosen the stays and shrouds anyway to prevent the stress on the hull from the shortening of wire in cold, so the additional nuisance of taking the whole thing out is not so big. And makes it easiedr to survey the whole thing before the next season. All cranes in my area can lift yachts with the mast up (provoding the aft stays are removed), so that is not an impossibility. It also seems that there are no regulations against keeping the mast up. If I were an insurance official, I would make it illegal because of the increased risks of toppling or stresses on the hlul. After all, the leverage imposed by a mast is much more than without. -- Mast wedges and the seal do not seem at all the same thing to me. Wedges are there to take up stresses, and the seal to prevent leakage. If one uses wedges instead of Spartite, one can easily change the position of the mast, as trimming requires, by just moving the wedges. I understand that this is impossible with Spartite. Dag Stenberg |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| tyvek (long) | Boat Building | |||
| Mast Rake and Mast Bend | ASA | |||
| Mast Wedges | ASA | |||
| What's with mast wedges. | ASA | |||
| Mast down (long) | ASA | |||