David Tyler wrote:
John,
The main difficulty was to make joints that were strong enough and resistant to cyclical loadings. The bridge pieces behind the mast were rivetted on, and loosened. Welding would soften the alloy. If I made alloy noses again, I would try to bend them around in one piece, rather than rivetting on a plastic piece at the luff. This, I think would be hard to do, as the tube has to be over-bent and then allowed to spring back. It took me a while to develop a former shape just for the nose made from two pieces of tube. It would be as big a development job to develop a former shape for a one piece tubular alloy nose as for a CFRP moulding...
David,
I know this is water over the dam for you, but if one were experimenting with making the wishbones of aluminum I wondered about making the nose piece out of bent aluminum tubing, separate from the long pieces. TexasTowers.com sells 6' and 12' lengths of AL tubing from 3/8" OD to 2-1/8" OD, by 1/8" increments, with the wall thickness of all tubes 0.058" (which is just under 1/16"). Thus, all tubing sizes telescope into the next larger/smaller size. So you could bend the nose pieces out of tubing one size smaller than your main battens, and either rivet, screw or bolt the wishbones and nose together.
URL for 6' lengths
http://www.texastowers.com/aluminum-6.htm
For the strut that you are thinking about placing aft of the mast I wonder if lashing it to the wishbones would a be useful alternative to welding or riveting (which you can't do for CF, but tried for aluminum). Aluminum tube skin-on-frame kayaks sometimes use lashed joints. Here is an example of one. I could imagine lashing aluminum tubing, aluminum channel, HDPE shapes, or CF or GRP shapes where you want a very strong but resilient joint.
http://s13.postimg.org/7066sj0w7/Lashed_Frame.gif