Makinus
New Member
Hello,
I've got my boat (Albin Vega 27') a year ago and haven't inspected the rigging before now.
Upon inspection I found that the toggles on the mast, which holds the lower aft and forward shrouds had some elongation in the holes that hold the shroud pin. The exact same thing happened to both toggles, but I will only be showing one, since they are very similar.
Here is a picture showing the elongation:
The elongation was from 8mm (diameter of hole) to 9mm in the elongated direction.
Here is a 3D render of the part and dimensions to give you a better idea of how the toggle looks like:
I was prepared to pay a shop to bend 2mm stainless to those shapes, but I met a friendly oldtimer-blacksmith in the yard who were willing to give the toggles some love
. "Us DIY'ers need to stick together" he said
. After a bit of bashing with hammer and a tiny bit of welding they ended up like this:
The elongated holes are now down to 8.5mm (from 9mm), and as you can see it's flush at the end.
The smith said he will guarantee it will hold, but I'm always worried about stuff like this. It's not like I don't trust him but I'm always worried about vital parts of the boat, and since I don't know anything myself a second opinion is always nice. What do you guys think?
As of how this damage happened, I'm afraid I can't blame the (damn) PO for this one
. I assume the elongations happened when I myself accidentally started lifting the mast with a crane, while some shrouds were still holding on!
For those interested, I also did a bit of static stress simulation in CAD, but I couldn't make the numbers makes sense when the elongation was the same as mine:
I've got my boat (Albin Vega 27') a year ago and haven't inspected the rigging before now.
Upon inspection I found that the toggles on the mast, which holds the lower aft and forward shrouds had some elongation in the holes that hold the shroud pin. The exact same thing happened to both toggles, but I will only be showing one, since they are very similar.
Here is a picture showing the elongation:
The elongation was from 8mm (diameter of hole) to 9mm in the elongated direction.
Here is a 3D render of the part and dimensions to give you a better idea of how the toggle looks like:
I was prepared to pay a shop to bend 2mm stainless to those shapes, but I met a friendly oldtimer-blacksmith in the yard who were willing to give the toggles some love
The elongated holes are now down to 8.5mm (from 9mm), and as you can see it's flush at the end.
The smith said he will guarantee it will hold, but I'm always worried about stuff like this. It's not like I don't trust him but I'm always worried about vital parts of the boat, and since I don't know anything myself a second opinion is always nice. What do you guys think?
As of how this damage happened, I'm afraid I can't blame the (damn) PO for this one
For those interested, I also did a bit of static stress simulation in CAD, but I couldn't make the numbers makes sense when the elongation was the same as mine:
