DFL1010
Well-Known Member
Does it?
15m mast 1Kg moment of 150Nm, if instead stood 1.5m abeam of the mast on deck would be like having a 10L fuel tank strapped to the guardrail.
I know many who wouldn't bat an eyelid at that, but maybe I've got something horribly wrong there.
I wouldn't say that clambering around the deck is a problem, just that it'd be nice not to need to. I was also considering reducing the halyard diameter to 8mm, but not sure what load one should expect a halyard to take.
As with most things in life, it's not that simple. The main thing that simply considering the moments ignores is the angular momentum. Your 1kg at 15m will have a lot more effect on the pitching/rolling motion than 10kg of fuel on the rail.
Second, consider the centre of gravity of the small weight, compared to the centre of gravity of the vessel. At equilibrium, the centre of gravity of the small weight will act vertically downwards, through the centre of gravity of the ship, and will not induce listing moment.
However, as the ship rolls, the transverse moment increases as the distance between the two centres increases. The theoretical biggest effect would be an angle of 90 degrees, since that's the largest transverse distance between the centres (ignoring the fact that then the weight would be in the water, and you'd have to consider the buoyancy of the weight, and ...
Anyway, none of this is really that relevant to the question at hand, which is how sensible it is to do this (IMHO, not very, but not really for these reasons). And now I've given myself flashbacks to ship stability at college. If I start mumbling about metacentres into my beer this evening, you know why.