Malcolm I hope you don't mind me coming on to this thread, because I can't actually answer your question. But I am thinking that your idea of C-clamps with stub axles sounds rather expensive and complicated, and may not be necessary.
Most people are familiar with the fascinating system used by some of the old wherries and barges in England to allow lowering a heavy mast with minimum of effort, to shoot under bridges. The part of the mast below the fulcrum was ballasted and it swung up through an opening in the foredeck - features which are both probably out of the question in most modern yachts today. But the image has left us with a mind-set which has re-ocurred over and over again in nearly all the tabernacle designs we see - that the opening of the tabernacle must face forward, and there must be a pin through the mast, allowing it to rotate about an axis which is some distance above the heel. Neither of these things is actually a necessary part of a tabernacle, and a pin through an aluminium mast, as you know, is undesirable. I wonder if your "solution" has arisen as a result of this familiar paradigm.
David T has pointed out that a tabernacle may, with advantage in some cases, have its opening facing aft. In that case there is no need for a pin or hinge of any kind, as when raising or lowering, the mast rotates about its heel, and is held in place by the socket which the tabernacle naturally provides. Nothing could be simpler. The axis of rotation is now at the bottom of the mast instead of just a little way up, but that barely affects the leverage required to raise an unballasted mast. Provided you have enough clearance for the tabernacle to give full "bury" above deck, this system might suit Malcolm because there seems to be no obstacle such as raised wheelhouse aft of the tabernacle, which would otherwise complicate things a little (and then the forward-facing tabernacle might make more sense.)
The following may be of less help to Malcolm but I am placing it here because it might provoke some more ideas for Malcolm to consider. Scott Y recently posted on another thread: "If I recall correctly you were also fitting an aluminum tabernacle to your boat without any welding. I would appreciate it if you could take some photos of the tabernacle setup and provide some more details on how it was fitted to mast step, partners and the mast."
The aluminium tabernacle was for a little motor sailer, and was simply a sheet of aluminium folded into a top hat section. In New Zealand, having it made this way by the local engineering shop proved to be a cheaper option than purchasing the quantity of good quality timber required and making it myself. No welding necessary. The scantlings, or thickness of the material, was equal to or slightly greater than the wall of the mast it would enclose. (That useful criterion was suggested by Pete Hill in an an article he wrote about wooden tabernacles.) A "fourth side" bolts on to the open face, afterwards, in the obvious way, and may be a structural necessity.
Some internal packing is required to house the circular mast inside the square tabernacle, and I chose to make a resin casting, although triangular section wooden fillets would be easier and probably just as good. The plan was to have the tabernacle with the opening facing forward, and to have the mast rotate back over a pin which does not go through the mast but passes behind it. It is fixed to the upper rear wall of the tabernacle. When raising or lowering the mast, it would be simply belayed to the horizontal pin with a temporary rope square lashing, which will rotate with the mast, about the pin. The mast and tabernacle are made and ready to deploy, but I must confess I have not yet installed and tried it in practice, because the project has been delayed while I try out some of these ideas on a smaller scale, on a little trailer yacht.
Accordingly, I made another folded aluminum top-hat tabernacle, this time smaller, and slightly rectangular rather than square. The rectangular section allows a little fore-and-aft "wriggle room" should the rig need to be moved forwards or aft slightly, simply by altering the internal packing. It would also allow a little adjustment of mast rake if required. The intention was again to have it facing forward, with a fixed rear pin and a rope lashing for a hinge. However, Marcus took one look at the proposal and pointed out a much simpler alternative, which probably will not be possible in most boats, but works on this little boat because the little cabin has an open top. It was pointed out that a small slot cut in the open cabin top would allow the mast to be heel-stepped in the conventional way, and simply walked up over the heel in the manner suggested by David T.'s aft-facing tabernacle idea. In fact, in this case, a tabernacle as such would not even be necessary, but I have used the aluminium tabernacle anyway, because it was already made and it does still make the operation of raising and lowering the mast a little easier. Here is a picture of the little tabernacle, dry-fitted in place.
To answer the rest of Scott's question, I glued plywood onto the three sides of the tabernacle where it goes through the deck, offered it into the slot, and then fitted a rectangular wooden partner around it which is glued and fastened to the fibreglass deck, and also glued to the plywood facing of the tabernacle. It was all fairly quick and easy to do. This little boat won't be stiff enough to put too much loading onto the partner, and the fibreglass layup is relatively heavy in that area. If a laminated beam and knees prove over time to be necessary, they can be added.
To raise the mast, the heel is simply placed into the tabernacle then the mast is walked up until it is vertical and then closed off with a gate which bolts across at the aft face of the tabernacle and also completes the aft part of the partner. It is simple, quick to deploy and works very well. The heel of the mast is square so it can not rotate, and it is pinned in place down there so that it can not jump out. The mast itself is more than 6m in height, and weighs about 30kg. A bigger mast may require a lifting apparatus, as would be the case with any tabernacle. Malcolm's mast is relatively heavy, but it is less than 6m tall so quite possibly he might get away with just pushing it up, as I (an old-age pensioner) can do without too much difficulty with the above little set-up.
If necessary to make the whole thing leak-proof (which I don't need to bother about in this case) the answer would have to be a tailor-made fabric skirt which is duct-taped to the mast and flashes over any openings - a fairly conventional idea which is often used on through-deck masts, and Arne has documented a very good pattern for a round opening, in one of his many practical writeups (here); that idea could be adapted to the rectangular tabernacle. I guess something like this will always be necessary for a "sunk tabernacle", but, of course, if there is enough room for the working part of the tabernacle to be entirely above deck (as in Annie's new boat) then there can never be a problem with deck leaks.
I am sure there are better ways, and I hope the above bounces a few ideas for Malcolm.