![]() |
stainless rigging wire - nick in wire
On 2007-10-08 21:41:39 -0400, Wayne.B said:
On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 18:22:30 -0700, Frogwatch wrote: I wish I'd gone with Norseman or Staylok instead of swaged terminals when I rerigged. From what I see on the web, they last much longer with no cracking of the swaged area. I think that's a good plan if you have a way to load test them to SWL off the boat. Otherwise you really need a *lot* of confidence in your workmanship. I believe that a Norsman or Staylok job is more likely done better by amateurs than the usual "professional" job done by swagers. Swaging depends upon deforming stainless stock in a controlled manner, but there isn't a direct method of determining that the deformation was properly performed. A poor swage won't show it's face for years. A Norsman or Staylok job can be reviewed immediately. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's new pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI pages: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
stainless rigging wire - nick in wire
|
stainless rigging wire - nick in wire
On Oct 9, 3:05 am, wrote:
... Essentially the strength of rigging based on the effort to heel the boat to its self-righting point times a safety factor. Any boat design or professional rigging handbook should have the calcs. ... Yes, I think shrouds are typically sized to take about 3 times the healing force at 30 degrees. Head stays are a little more complicated. The NBS standard as described in the always useful "Principles of Yacht Design", Larrson & Eliasson, does start from the 30 degree RM but the proper wire size uses a multiplier of 15. However, I'm sure that IACC boats use much bigger multipliers and little gaff rigged sloop could get away with a lot less. The loads on the head stay are more properly functions of how stiff the boat is and how effective the tensioning system is. You just can't have too much headstay tension on a modern sloop. These days any reputable rig designer (and there are specialists in this) will calculate the loads from first principles. Since the static safety factor for the shrouds is 2 to 3 times I'd expect a similar factor is built into the rules for the headstay but I wouldn't bet a huge sum on that and it isn't really easy to get there from transverse stability... -- Tom. |
stainless rigging wire - nick in wire
nice BVI shots Jere...
On Oct 8, 6:47 pm, Jere Lull wrote: On 2007-10-08 19:58:31 -0400, said: On Oct 7, 7:44 pm, wrote: I've managed to put two nicks in the 1/19 stainless forestay on my 32' boat. Dont ask how, far too embarassing, suffice to say a hack saw got drawn across the wire. Nothing was cut through, but two small chunks got taken out of two strands. How dangerous is this? here's the orginal poster back. The stay is four years old, the nicks are nicks, not gouges. Perhaps 1/8 of the strand's total diameter? Point about I already know the answer is well taken. I shall have to pay for my stupidity, as it aint worth the dismasting. (Just consider the deductible!) Thank you! I love it when a questioner comes back and says what he/she decided, based upon our collective opinions. Expect you won't be using the forestay as a sawing surface again.... ;-) [Don't worry, all of us who have been around for a while have done stupider things. Some of us are strong enough to admit to them. (I'm not sure I'm one of that crowd.)] -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's new pages:http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI pages:http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
stainless rigging wire - nick in wire
"~^ beancounter ~^" wrote in message oups.com... nice BVD shorts Jere... Must you gay up every post? Wilbur Hubbard |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:18 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com