Why I was late for the AGM

  • 27 May 2014 20:00
    Reply # 1557756 on 1557328
    Deleted user
    Correction, sorry Richard - i meant to say that the legs would need to be able to raise from a point a little over HALF of the LAP.

    I trawled the various rowing clubs on the Thames near Hampton Court and Kingston asking ' what do you do with your sweeps when split or damaged'.
    One place eventually said - "We chuck them in that corner" and i was invited to take them away.
    (I wonder if Cambridge Rowing Club might be able to assist you?)

    Shortened and glued up i soon had a decent 'A' frame.
    I chopped a long sausage fender ( the type that have a rope at each end)  in half, pushed the plastic cup over the end of the oars, stood them next to a side deck cleat, to act as a cushion and to secure the end. 
    I suppose you could use the existing end of your mast below the hinge to act as a compression strut,  construct a tabernacle above deck, with a pivot  say 3' up, then the sides of the tabernacle would limit athwartships wobble and you could lower the mast aft, controlled from a line forrd - once you have fixed your deck...
    If it was me i would chop off that piece of conical GRP and work off the actual deck which will offer much better structural support.
    Ash 


    Last modified: 27 May 2014 20:24 | Deleted user
  • 27 May 2014 09:15
    Reply # 1557543 on 1557540
    Ash Woods wrote:
    I would devise a pair of sheer legs  to hold the mast just above its balance point with a small tackle. The legs could  double as sweeps. They would only need to be a little over the LAP of the mast.
    I wouldn't trust any hinge / pivot device to cope with the loads imparted whilst afloat,  movements of the vessel even in flat calm due to your movement could be massive.
    With bilge keels and the vessel on the hard at least the boat would be stable and you could rig temporary stays - as per your photos.
    I had a similar problem with a Coromandel with a rigid one piece mast, the little wedges were cracking the GRP, near the top of the GRP cone, despite trying to apply their load at the base of the cone where it was supported by the deck.

    We repaired with epoxy and grp woven rovings and a new mast boot and had no further problems.
    I used to raise a mast on a 21' Wharram Tiki singlehanded with two sweeps cut down for the purpose. I never needed to to so afloat.

    On Robin Blain's boat GiGi he has a hinge - not sure if he tries it afloat - more a case of rigging it ashore after trailing.
    Good to meet you at the AGM with your Mum and Dad
    Ash

    Thanks Ash. Yes, I'm thinking of sheer legs made from sweeps, when I can find some, though I'm going to try sculling first. A thule pin for a sculling oar could also make it function as an emergency rudder.

    I don't like the rattly stainless steel gallows on the Coromandel very much.  I spotted this crossed-boards arrangement on Shoal Waters and that also resembles sheer legs, so I'm wondering if there's some cunning re-use there too.  Wood.  I like wood.

    When I talk about lowering the mast afloat I'm mainly thinking of canals or rivers, away from swell and chop, but Tammy Norie does sway quite a lot if someone puts the kettle on so she's not exactly a stable platform.
  • 27 May 2014 09:05
    Reply # 1557541 on 1557439
    Annie Hill wrote:Good stuff, Richard; nice blog.  Why not write up your experiences with your new boat for the magazine?  Quite a lot of members don't read the fora on a regular basis and I'm sure people would be very interested to read about your adventures.

    Thanks Annie.  I'd be happy for the magazine to reproduce articles from my blog, and I could write them with that in mind. I'll speak to the editors.
  • 27 May 2014 09:00
    Reply # 1557540 on 1557328
    Deleted user
    Hi Richard,

    I would devise a pair of sheer legs  to hold the mast just above its balance point with a small tackle. The legs could  double as sweeps. They would only need to be a little over the LAP of the mast.
    I wouldn't trust any hinge / pivot device to cope with the loads imparted whilst afloat,  movements of the vessel even in flat calm due to your movement could be massive.
    With bilge keels and the vessel on the hard at least the boat would be stable and you could rig temporary stays - as per your photos.
    I had a similar problem with a Coromandel with a rigid one piece mast, the little wedges were cracking the GRP, near the top of the GRP cone, despite trying to apply their load at the base of the cone where it was supported by the deck.

    We repaired with epoxy and grp woven rovings and a new mast boot and had no further problems.
    I used to raise a mast on a 21' Wharram Tiki singlehanded with two sweeps cut down for the purpose. I never needed to to so afloat.

    On Robin Blain's boat GiGi he has a hinge - not sure if he tries it afloat - more a case of rigging it ashore after trailing.
    Good to meet you at the AGM with your Mum and Dad
    Ash
  • 27 May 2014 01:46
    Reply # 1557439 on 1557328
    Good stuff, Richard; nice blog.  Why not write up your experiences with your new boat for the magazine?  Quite a lot of members don't read the fora on a regular basis and I'm sure people would be very interested to read about your adventures.
  • 26 May 2014 17:11
    Message # 1557328
    For anyone wondering just what happened to make me late for the AGM, here's Launch weekend part 2: Yarmouth to Lymington via Newtown Creek in which I break various important parts of my new boat!
       " ...there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in junk-rigged boats" 
                                                               - the Chinese Water Rat

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