No prob!
I think you'll find yourself doing that more and more as you continue to make the changes to your boat that make YOU happy ...
Moderator: GreenLake
jdoorly wrote:There is a standard method for lengthening a mast section. Mast makers, like Dwyer, can only get mast sections up to 25(?) ft long and must therefore scarf sections together to make long masts. What they do is take an extra section of the same mast profile about 10% of the total length of the mast, and cut away the slot area (after 20% of mast). The scarph section can now be folded in a little, but it's enough to slide half into one mast section and then the other half into the second mast section. Then put in a lot of equally spaced pop rivets in to hold it together and spread the load.
jdoorly wrote:The mast/boom relationship hasn't changed, the boom has always been there applying it's flex pressure on the mast. That's no different than the stock step up. I can see however that adding a coupling of any kind inside the cuddy could compromise the rigidity of the complete mast unit. That couplers gotta go and I need to at least replace that entire lower section with a solid one piece unit.
It should work for a while, but don't how long or if there's a 'warning' period. The mast section is a Dwyer DM284 about $12 a foot. http://www.dwyermast.com, I'd get one foot, cut the slot off, and stick it inside your existing sections with a bunch of aluminum rivets.
jdoorly wrote:Just for the record, what size and type were the rivets? Manual or pneumatic? What are you gonna do about strengthening the mast base?
And again good job! (and pictures to prove it!)
jdoorly wrote:Yes, my mast does overhang the transom a lot. (Since the standard mast is 20.5' from location B2 to the masthead)
GreenLake wrote:The answer is on this stie in the box below the logo.
Click on Day Sailer Association and then "Handbook" and then it should be extplained in chapter 3.
jdoorly wrote:Yes, my mast does overhang the transom a lot. (Since the standard mast is 20.5' from location B2 to the masthead, and the pivot is higher than that, if you deduct 10' for the length of the boom plus another foot to the transom that leaves 9.5 feet of overhand). It does bounce although I always tie it tightly down to the gallows. There are 2 reasons it makes me uncomfortable, it's old and beat up and I worry about it getting damaged, and it sits out pretty far behind the transom and I worry some car will not see my orange flag and hit it. That's why I made the gallows extension- to raise the end of the mast over 8' at the masthead end.
I can disconnect the pivot and pull the mast forward up to the pulpit and tie it down there, that cuts the overhang to 3 feet. Generally I don't do this because then I have to dig out a 3/4" box end and a 3/4" socket to unscrew the 1/2-13' pivot bolt. But next year I will try using the safety bolt scheme, one of those big wiggly cotters, and see if the mast does or does not need the firm fit afforded by the wrenches.
I've made a detachable roller for the mast on the gallows and a holder for the mast stub so the mast can be held in three places and 'rolled' forward to the pulpit.
A support pole would help, although I haven't bothered to try and support the overhanging mast. It might by better to use a short gin pole to put in some leverage angle and pull the main halyard over the gin pole and tie it to the foredeck cleat which would dampen any bouncing.
jdoorly wrote:My mast base is a stainless "U" channel 6"x2 1/2" with five #10x4" ss screws holding it to the mast step (under the floor). It has 7 sets of holes in the sides which are used to set mast rake by putting a 1/4" pin through an appropriate hole, then though the mast base casting (the mast), which needed a hole to be drilled in it, then through the opposing hole and cotter pinned. That came with my boat. But I modified it and it's still in prototype and I'm still working out the bugs. This was originally an attempt to raise the mast so I could rake it more to gain weatherhelm. I kept adding 3/4" blocks plus a wedge block so the end of the boom wouldn't hit my head! Now it is approching instability in athwartships direction- it needs to be wider, but maybe I'll spring for a 4' section of DM2 or make a 'big' sailboat type tabernacle. Don't know yet.
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