Glueing a tapered topmast to a cylindrical tube

  • 12 Feb 2021 16:31
    Reply # 10088746 on 10071663
    Deleted user

    Graeme:

         While you may not have originated the balloon idea, you deserve credit for storing it away for future use, and recognizing it's potential value.   The old saying "there is nothing new under the sun" is very true.  Often we can take technology from an unrelated field and apply it in new and novel ways that appear innovative.  

          There is nothing more irritating to me than young engineers who come up with "brilliant new solutions", which are in reality things that were tried and discarded long ago because they were bad ideas.   "The History of Engineering Failures and Bad Ideas" should be a required course for all engineering students.  There is enough material to have an ongoing course throughout the entire education of an engineer.   There is more to be learned from failures than from successes I think, but we need to study both.


                                                             H.W.

  • 11 Feb 2021 20:48
    Reply # 10085186 on 10071663
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Howard: thanks for clarifying that, I did not read carefully enough. I think we are more or less on the same page after all, regarding the thru-deck detail - in fact I believe something along those lines is often done, as a high-tech alternative to traditional wedges and waterproof shroud. Spartite (which is marketed especially for this mast-thru-deck application) is available here, but it is not cheap. Unfortunately we do not have the range of synthetic rubbers and resins which you have in the States, and when I used castable rubber in a previous project the only choice I had was spartite, or a near equivalent castable rubber which is sold in various grades from an artists and modelers supply store here, which was a bit cheaper, and which I used successfully following David's instructions - though it was a little softer than I really wanted, and I did find batching and mixing to require real accuracy (I had one failed batch, from remnants, that was my fault.) Hard rubber castables does seem to be an excellent way of solving some detail problems and David T in the UK seems to know quite a lot about this.

    The balloon idea popped into my head while I was writing but it is not my idea - I am pretty sure I read of someone doing something like that, but I don't recall who or where - I think it might have been on this forum, anyway it is someone else's clever idea. When I get to making the mast for my scow, I think I might try doing that.

    Last modified: 11 Feb 2021 21:05 | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 11 Feb 2021 17:10
    Reply # 10084047 on 10071663
    Deleted user

    Graeme:

          You misunderstood me or I didn't express myself well on this.  I was NOT proposing welding a flange to the actual mast, only to a short piece of heavy tubing with an ID about 50 mm larger than the mast to allow the rubber to be poured between the mast and the piece that actually formed the partner.    The idea being to eliminate that hard "corner"  where the mast transitions from being fully supported to fully unsupported.    The mast simply passes through the larger very short piece of tubing, isolated by the rubber.  A casting would be elegant.  Look at a common plumbing fitting.  A flange with 3 or 4 bolts that you can screw a piece of pipe into for something like a stanchion for a porch rail, or a coat hanger rod.  Now imagine using a smaller diameter piece of pipe that will not thread into it, but fall through.   Passing that smaller pipe completely through, and attaching it to a structure below, and then pouring the space between the flange and pipe full of rubber. You now have a stanchion that is solid, but has some ability to flex slightly where it passes through the flange.


          Your balloon idea is a stroke of genius.    Inflate it inside from a tube that passes out the end, pour in your rubber, and leave it in place when you are finished!  Properly located it would seal both places you don't what the rubber to go.


                                                           H.W.


    PS I am not so sure about Howard's suggested detail of a flange welded to the mast at the point where it goes through the deck. The "Spartite" detail would seem to be not only sufficient, but simpler and possibly better.

    Last modified: 11 Feb 2021 10:27 | Graeme Kenyon

  • 10 Feb 2021 22:41
    Reply # 10079673 on 10071663
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    I don't see why fitting a tapered tube to a non-tapered outer tube is really much more difficult than joining two non-tapered tubes, using fibreglass belts, as Jami has already done. The two belts will be slightly different in thickness, but both will have the same outer diameter (to match the inside diameter of the outer tube.)

    [If you want to make PERFECT fit (probably not necessary) you can reverse the smaller diameter tube and run it completely inside the outer tube, with a soft collar at the top end to maintain perfect concentricity - and use the inside of the outer tube, at the other end, as a casting mould for the fibreglass and thickened epoxy. Of course, you need a pretty good parting agent and a certain amount of courage! I have done this, but not sure if I would do it again. I used a parting agent – and two layers of baking paper to be on the safe side – and it was still a little difficult to part the two, and a matter of some relief when, with some work with a heavy hammer against a block of wood, the perfect inner did finally slide out - and then with the paper removed, reversed back in perfectly.] 

    A cone-shaped external fairing can then be added, to smooth the transition between the two tubes.


    The glue joint just needs to be sufficient to withstand the downward pressure of the halyard and sail bundle, and also the rotating force which the halyard and yard will induce on the top tube. I have used epoxy glue, but believe that one of the flexible polyurethane rubber glues might be better practice. The "bury" should, of course,  be minimum 10% of the upper part and its easy to make it a bit more. That conical external fairing of glass and thickened epoxy should take care of most of the downward and rotational forces, and just a few dabs of glue should be all that is necessary on the inside - think of it structurally as a tabernacle.

    A more interesting question is joining two tubes when the outer tube is tapered.


    This has been in the back of my mind for over a year now, since I acquired a couple of large spinnaker poles from Marcus, who got them off one of the Volvo round-the-world yachts that must have called in to Whangarei some years ago. These are top quality heavy wall aluminium tube, tapered at both ends.


    One of these spinnaker poles will make an excellent bottom section for a mast I have in mind. (I should explain, despite having an aluminium smelter, we can't get tapered aluminium poles here in New Zealand, and only a limited range of parallel tubes.).

    It does seem a pity to cut off the tapered parts. (A taper at the heel would be an elegant feature, and the taper at the top of the mast base would lead nicely to the diameter of the next tube.)

    It’s just a matter of how to do it.

    Howard has scoped the problem correctly, and David has provided good advice on similar questions in the past - a castable material which can be poured into the annular cavity, and a dam at the end of the cavity to contain the material until it sets, and to keep the two tubes concentric. Now the interesting question is, just how to actually go about doing it: how to pour into the space between two concentric tubes with the outer one tapered down to match the approximate diameter of the inner one. A nicely fitting stiff foam or rubber flange on the end of the inner tube might be sufficient as a dam. Now, how to pour in that castable material? Turn the mast upside down, vertical, and work from an upper balcony? In that case, you wouldn’t need the dam.

    And now the real challenge - how to get a poured join between two concentric tubes when the outer one is tapered at both ends!


    So far I can think of only one way and that is to lie the two tubes horizontal, supported firmly so as to maintain concentricity - and pour through a hole in the side of the outer tube. I still haven't figured out how to get a dam in there!

    I bet there is an answer though. A balloon?

    Some lateral-thinking mechanic will come up with a way, those fancy spinnaker poles are too good to send to the scrap yard.


    PS I am not so sure about Howard's suggested detail of a flange welded to the mast at the point where it goes through the deck. The "Spartite" detail would seem to be not only sufficient, but simpler and possibly better.

    Last modified: 11 Feb 2021 10:27 | Anonymous member (Administrator)
  • 10 Feb 2021 18:34
    Reply # 10078543 on 10071663
    Deleted user
    Anonymous wrote:

    I received a nice, tapered al-tube for free, and I'm about to renovate my Galion 22 mast. 

    At the moment the mast is constructed from a cylindrical 120mm tube and a 100mm tube glued to this. I will change the topmast to the considerably lighter tapered tube, in order to make the mast lighter and less prone to excess windage.

    Glueing the two cylindrical tubes was quite easy using glass "belts" to match the thickness of the 100mm tube to the inner diameter of the 120mm tube.

    But with a tapered tube this is more complicated. Has anyone come up with a simple and yet strong solution?


     One approach that might be interesting to try on a test example is Devcon Flexane 80.  It's a high density urethane rubber that is pour able.  it is approximately the same material as is in a standard automotive engine mount.  There is a density modifier that will increase the durometer (hardness).  I've used the stuff in a number of projects with good success.  There is a primer youi can apply to metals such as aluminum to help grip, but it is inherently grippy.  Assuming the upper mast is inside the lower, the challenge would be to create a dam to hold the liquid from just running through, and keep the lower end of the joint concentric.   The other challenge would be that you would be working with the mast vertical most likely, though this stuff is very pour able, and it dould be done with the mast laid down.  With the small intervening space between upper and lower there would probably be virtually no actual give.   Rubber is not compressible, but flexible, which means to compress, it has to extrude somewere else.   but having it not metal to metal is a plus.  

         I've long felt that this would be ideal material to  use in a mast partner.   Say a tube around the mast that was perhaps 50 mm large ID than the mast, with flexane between.  The outer tube might have a flange welded to it and be heavy wall, and would bolt to the deck.  If the depth of the flexane were kept down to 25-50mm, shock loads would be taken up as deformation of the rubber, and it would eliminate the hard point where a metal mast extends through a rigid deck, where all the forces are greatest.  

       This product is available both as a pour able liquid and a putty

    Devcon Flexane 80 description

    I've used this product on projects dating back around 30 years.  The local bearing house carried it, but due to corporate buyouts, etc, and the attitude of the corporation toward customers (Motion Industries), I quite doing business with them.   Carrying minimal inventory, while still expecting to collect premium prices on products the customer pays a premium shipping price for is a no go for me.   I just go around them and order online these days...... greed and arrogance has it's price, and that is loss of customers.

                                                  H.W.


    Amazon of course has it listed, there are also Ebay sellers listing it

  • 09 Feb 2021 12:17
    Message # 10071663

    I received a nice, tapered al-tube for free, and I'm about to renovate my Galion 22 mast. 

    At the moment the mast is constructed from a cylindrical 120mm tube and a 100mm tube glued to this. I will change the topmast to the considerably lighter tapered tube, in order to make the mast lighter and less prone to excess windage.

    Glueing the two cylindrical tubes was quite easy using glass "belts" to match the thickness of the 100mm tube to the inner diameter of the 120mm tube.

    But with a tapered tube this is more complicated. Has anyone come up with a simple and yet strong solution?

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