Ken Smith
ADMIN
Posts: 289
sail often, travel light
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« Reply #5 on: October 25, 2007, 10:57:04 PM » |
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Folks, making masts is not easy. Bob, Lou, Cave, and others have spent several years learning how, building the tools, gathering materials, making jigs, figuring out how to make a wood pressure vessel, making epoxy spreaders, figuring out a layup schedule, finding bolt rope tubes, etc. Can it be done at a home near you? Yes. Will you make some bad masts before you make a good one? Almost certainly. Will your mast be cheaper than a Kent or a Sherry spar? Absolutely, if you do not count your time. Will it be faster, reproducable and competitive every time? No. But some will be. And after 10 or 20, most might. And it is fun.
Bob Rast helped me build one a few years ago, and it was fun. We tried a few different ideas, found the mast too soft, stiffened it, tuned and played with it for two seasons. Never got it fast enough. Then I bought a Sherry mast, got faster and more consistent performance. Still sailing teh Sherry now four or five years later. A bargain. Its more fun to sail fast and tune other stuff.
Now about that bamboo. The mast looks, performs and came out of tha same mold as Jeff's other masts. The paint is beautiful and unusual. But the layup schedule is one you can buy from Jeff. Your mast will look green or black, depending on your preference, though. This was the BEST spoof ever perpetrated that I have personal knowledge of. I cannot believe people are still looking at Jeff's "bamboo" mast and not recognizing what they see. If you really want a bamboo mast, go for it . Good luck.
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