Mast partners and Coach Sides

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  • 25 Aug 2016 17:06
    Reply # 4210420 on 4208358
    Deleted user

    Thanks David - that's helpful.  I'll make a hefty laminated beam that follows a parabola that just touches the inside curve of the cabin side to deck transition, locking in at that point, the aft edge partners, and the knees.   You mentioned four knees.  Not two? Do you mean a pair on both sides, fore and aft of the beam?

  • 25 Aug 2016 09:49
    Reply # 4209843 on 4208358
    I think you need part of a laminated ring frame here, Scott. A full ring frame, that is as nearly a circle as possible, joins the partners, with a force acting in one direction, to the step, with a force acting in the opposite direction, elegantly and economically in terms of strength/weight. If the hull is not strong, the full ring frame is desirable; but your boat is likely to have a thick, strong hull construction, so the lower part of the "ring" is already there. You just have to add the upper part, not following the profile of the coachroof and deck exactly, but bridging across the corners. You're on the right lines, in mentioning hanging knees, and I think that you just need to combine four hanging knees into one laminated beam that spans the boat from side to side, linking the partners to the hull. This is what I've done in a similar scenario with Weaverbird, using 12mm plywood. You could do the same, using 18mm plywood, but laminating a beam that has a similar shape to the curved bottom edge of my beam would give you the more open look that you're aiming at.
  • 24 Aug 2016 18:42
    Message # 4208358
    Deleted user

    I've succeeded in pulling out both the headliner and hull liner, and now I'm staring at a huge bulkhead-and-liner-free space in what used to be a v-berth and head.

    The bulkheads will not be replaced as originally designed because I'm moving the head aft next to the companionway.  Also, while they were tabbed on the sides to the hull, neither to top or the bottom of any bulkheads were in contact with the roof or hull.   They were all held loosely in place by the liner. 

    So I'm trying to determine how open I can leave my layout, making use of deck beams or hanging knees.  How strong are these cabin sides typically?  I intend to beef up the horizontal (cambered) surface of the coach roof substantially, and install some sort of hanging knee from the underside of the side deck to the hull.  But what about the turn when the side decks go vertical to head up to the coach roof?  How much flexing is that going to have to take due to mast forces?  That transition from vertical to horizontal has me worried.  Would a laminated beam that follows the S-shaped inside contour be advised?

     

    Last modified: 25 Aug 2016 17:08 | Deleted user
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