Ken Smith
ADMIN
Posts: 289
sail often, travel light
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« Reply #4 on: March 18, 2009, 11:11:39 PM » |
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Aluminum masts are not tapered. Composite masts, at least the fast ones, are. So find a composite mast and use that as a master.
Contact Bob Rast for excellent advice. He has developed the tools and materials and skills. It only took seven years or so. Bob may share his layup schedule, or not. Lou Loeneke had a mold for sale last fall at the swap meet, and it may still be available, for a jump start. Both were built from Kent masts as masters, I believe.
Believe me, once you take the time to build a mold and wood pressure vessel (to hold the mold closed while the internal bladder is inflated to 25-30 pounds), and find the material for the bladder, buy the epoxy and glass and parting compound, and the building table, and the post-cure oven, and the pressure regulator for the bladder, and the luff tube material, and do the mold prep and epoxy drain holes, and actually build one, fit it and sail it, only then will you start to evaluate exactly how good or bad the masts are. Oh, that is after you figure out how to cut the bolt-rope tunnel and mount the hound and mast base and halyard and pulley and halyard stops. A little carbon is a trivial price.
Oh, I watched my Polish friends measuring masts. They support the mast at the base and hound and measure deflection at 200 pounds at the mid point. Then they move the mast down until the tip is on the horse and measure again.
Based on my experience, the proper bend is not very skipper weight dependent. The mast will bend or not in light air based on its stiffness and tuning, regardless of the skipper weight. The mast must bend to point and go fast. Most of the time, we sail in wind conditions less than the maximum that most skippers can handle, meaning less than what causes uncontrolled hiking or extreme mast bending. A heavier skipper will need to tune differently for heavier air, with more power available than a lighter skipper.
The above is NOT true for very light skippers, say less than 120 pounds. It has to bend to keep the boat in control in heavy air.
The tip stiffness is a preference. A sherry rocket and a sherry ugly stick and a sherry whip all bend differently. Skippers sailing all three were faster than I at the worlds. Usually. A mast with soft fore-aft bend is a mast that doesn't want to rotate. A soft tip looks odd, but seems to still go fast except at the very top end of the skipper skill levels.
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