Anonymous wrote:
Hi Asmat,
We'll see what the rudder- mod brings. I'll report back here.
The mast was hinged. I found the construction in the mast flimsy and the mild steel slieve protecting the default hinge too heavy to actually use for going under bridges without waiting for them to open. Because those were the considerations for modifying the standard setup:
- Strengthening a weakness;
- Easy work on the masthead;
- Avoid waiting for bridge / sleuce combination (in particular at Den Oever / Kornwerderzand)
A fabricator made a more substantial hinge inside the mast and we found a lighter aluminium slieve which rests on a made to measure piece of pom which sits just above mast to cabin entry point. I re-enforced that point with six layers of bi-axle cloth + epoxy.
I lower the mast once or twice a year but the slieve contraption requires attention every time I raise or lower the sail as the lines drawing the buttons to the mast easily get caught and I need to pay attention when lowering the sail. These were no problems with the default flat cut heavy sail with the heavy buttons and the heavy wooden yard. A smaller (carbon?) sleeve might be better. Switching to slippery dyneema lines and low friction eyes fixed a lot of these problems.
Another weird quick is that the sleeve is useable in summer but willl not move in winter - I am not making this up! So work on the top of the mast preferably on warm summer days next to the dock.
In reality the mast is too heavy / I am not strong enough / the rig is too complex to use it for quickly lowering the mast on the water - something I did regularly on my Drascombe Gig.
Siskin is too small / not set up for a real useful tabernacle and a mast in one piece. At least I don't see it. A tabernacle and a mast in one piece would be best.
So all considered: a mixed blessing my mast slieve arrangement.
Best regards,
Antoine
Hi Antoine,
Thanks for your description of Siskin's mast hinge. Combined with Richard Brooksby's Tammy Norie blog, this is useful information. I have been wondering about the difficulty of walking the mast upward along a Coromandel's short cabin top and I'm not surprised you find it hard. I'll be 70 in a few weeks, so this is a significant matter! Perhaps a hinged strut with a 4 part tackle leading to the chain roller could make the job easier, as long as the chain roller is well secured below deck level. Rudolf uses such a system, and he has a carbon fibre mast.
A kettle full of boiling water may help you to slide the sleeve in cold weather.
Apologies for diverting off your rudder topic. I'd create a new mast hinge topic, but I don't know how to reply to your post under a new title.
Asmat