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![]() QLW wrote in message ... Steve, As I suspected, my Engineer Friend went on in great detail to explain why stepping the mast on the deck or on the keel has no effect on the strength of the mast in compression. While some small benefit could conceivably be gained by helping to keep the mast in column, he claimed that would only occur in the case of a flawed design. If the mast were stepped on a poorly supported deck then all of the thinking changes...but that's a deck problem not a mast problem. Good reasons for either stepping the mast on the keel or on the deck can be argued, but compressive strength is not one of them. I think you're talking slightly at cross-purposes here. Ignoring bendy masts, keel stepping (and its corollary, deck support) doesn't add to strength in compression (as such), but it increases the bend stability of a mast under compression. Bend disturbances will occur due to inertia effects in a seaway, and the various sail tensions in different sailing conditions. This is not a design flaw, it's a design case. To keep the mast stable under compression, these bending moments must be resisted, either by using a large enough cross section, or by constraining movement with stays and deck support. With appropriate support, smaller cross sections can be used. Most vessels designed to withstand extreme conditions (ignoring racing) prefer straight masts. Keel stepping either adds to rig strength, or can be used to reduce weight aloft. An engineer will correctly say it makes no difference to the (pure) compression strength of a cross section. But as part of a rigging system, all other things being equal, it does add strength. JimB |
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