Anonymous wrote:
Howard,
of course I assume vacuum bagging, much easier as each piece is smaller, perhaps you could use a polythene tube.
yes a long mould, but narrow and not heavy.
perhaps pulltruded glass is strong enough, and more readily available at a reasonable cost.
i have seen a photo of pultruded carbon strip in a roll, used on the proa project that predates the Jzzerro two oceans attempt. I guess expensive, hence using tow, which can be made into a taper.
....all dreams, much easier to get a stock aluminium tube and stick a bit of wood in the end.
Mark:
Talk is cheap as they say.... and dreams are free. Carbon tow is I believe the most economical form, which is why people like Rob Denny use it extensively. JRA members are hardly breaking down the doors to get carbon fiber masts because they involve lots of cost or unfamiliar and possibly expensive construction, and the weight savings are simply not important to the majority of members who sail monohulls.
My interest is in multihulls for a number of good reasons based on the kind of sailing I I would like to do "eventually", which is long term voyaging to distant parts of the world. It's time to go to the places I've read and dreamed of. Most of my sailing has been solo... It's my nature to do things mostly solo. That makes about a 30' catamaran the optimal choice for me. It means having a bridge deck cabin or pod (non-standing) where I can take shelter out of the weather when necessary, an still have a good watch keeping position. A safe dry place to nap where I can have full view virtually instantly from my usual reclined sleeping position, and be only a step or two away from the cockpit with no ladder to climb. It means far less fatigue because I won't be spending days or weeks living "on my ear". Less potential of an MOB situation, being able to cook good hot meals easily and less potential of injury or scalding, etc.
Multihullers operate under a different set of rules than monohullers. You can't simply pile whatever weight you want aboard. They are inherently lower displacement, and usually less displacement per inch of submersion, and as you lose freeboard, you also lose bridge deck clearance. Bridge deck clearance is critical to both comfort and safety, as well as structural integrity.
It is necessary to have a backpacker's mentality on a small multihull sailboat. As a backpacker myself for over 50 years, I still think in terms of sawing the handle off toothbrushes.... as an extreme, and leaving everything behind that I can. If you are living aboard / voyaging on a small multihull, the problems are exaggerated. It is important to keep the boat as small as reasonably possible to keep costs and upkeep down, and to have a manageable boat....... I'm not interested in a proverbial "white elephant". That means eliminating weight wherever possible... while trying to keep costs down. The more money I throw at the boat, the less I have for voyaging, but being penny wise and pound foolish will bite one in the ass. Looking at the feasibility of carbon fiber masts for weight reduction makes sense ONLY if it is cost effective, and that means being able to build my own from economical materials, or perhaps finding salvage Freedom mast(s), etc. Hybrid might also be an option, as well as building only the lower mast portion and buying a carbon fiber windsurfer mast for the top portion, etc. Hybrid might mean carbon combined with wood or aluminum, etc. The weight savings may well not justify the cost of carbon, and the better option might be to focus on weight reduction in things like battens and sailcloth. Of course it also means stripping out all the "junk". Excessive galley stuff, head converted to composting, using a home built watermaker and greatly reducing tankage (non negotiable IMHO), with the water situation in some parts of the world. It means looking at what kind of propulsion, and how much fuel tankage. It means looking at energy storage & generation.... LIPO and solar, and using energy as it is produced where possible, such as cooking and making ice and water while the sun shines. It means doing dehydration of foods, and avoiding buying foods in heavy cans and jars where possible. It means making compromises on things like the dinghy to keep weight down, and making difficult choices on ground tackle.... You have to have chain, but how much? Losing a boat from making a poor compromise here is not an option. It means making difficult choices on what spares, cordage, tools, etc.... What can serve multiple functions, what is redundant, what can I not live without?
Here are some numbers from the boat that best fits my criteria.... except payload. 9.14M LOA. 5.95M Beam, .5M draft, 46.5 sq M sail area, Displacement empty: 1800KG, Displacment WL: 2700KG Payload 900 KG or about one US ton. Out of 900 KG comes the crew, and everything to support the crew, food, water, clothing, safety gear, Head, galley equipment, cooking fuel, dinghy, electronics, water plumbing and pumping systems, lighting, heating cleaning and laundry, etc. Also out of it comes motor fuel, ground tackle, tools and spares, batteries and wiring, switches and breakers, self steering systems, drogue(s) and sea anchors, and associated cordage, and on and on.
This being an epoxy ply design or strip plank hulls, owner built design, owner "enhancements" and "improvements" are all weight. That water heater and shower, clothes washer, and electric pumping system all get left ashore. Identifying the unnecessary "toothbrush handles", and pitching them overboard are top priority as far as I'm concerned. Assessing weather a single mast stepped on the bridge deck makes sense, or weather a pair of keel stepped masts is a better option will be interesting. a single mast looks possible, but location would be further than desirable aft. Do you correct for that with a head sail? Or by underwater mods? This design is built either with daggers or LAR keels.... Use a split junk rig, to minimize the issue, look at rudder balance and trim tab, add to the aft end of the LAR keel and remove from the forward end? Add a small fixed keel aft of the dagger if it had daggers? LAR keels inherently add displacement.... eliminate the daggers and install LARs?
As you can see I've looked at many things.... Including larger boats, and monohulls, and I keep coming back to the same place. The best option... If I was willing to go there would be to build to order. The same boat could be built with slightly longer and significantly larger displacement hulls (per the designer). Performance is where most designers focus, and that is low on my list of priorities. I'm following my own "drummer".
H.W.