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In article , QLW says...
"Tom Dacon" wrote in message ... It's a mechanical engineering issue. A mast (called a column by mechanical engineers) that's supported only at the ends is less strong in compression than a column that's supported at two points at one end. The support at the mast step, for a keel-stepped mast, allows the mast to take more compression before failing than a deck-stepped mast can. Because the stays and shrouds take sailing loads almost parallel to the mast, the mast column comes under significant compression load. While I like the idea of a keel stepped mast, I'm skeptical about the reasoning above. I'm not an engineer but I have a good friend that is...and he has a lot of aircract and boat design experience...so I'll run this thread by him this afternoon and get his input before saying more. I hope your friend agrees with the above post, since this IS the accepted wisdom wrt rigs. Deck stepped masts get less support than keel stepped masts. Therefore the deck stepped mast must be larger - and heavier - in cross section to make up for it. It's always an option, but it adds weight aloft. Steve Christensen |
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