DownWest
Well-Known Member
Well bolted is my vote, the one I made is used to raise the mast on the water, so lateral loads are noticable. A particular problem was the fixings were inside the side plates so the loads were higher. Normally they would be outside on the base. The rear hook needs to be fairly well fixed and hight adjusted, otherwise the foot of the mast will bind before it sites well. OK if the mast is light (LS) but no good if 32ft long and weighty. Hinge bolt better there.
Others take care of the side loads by fabricating chain plates that put the attachment for the shrouds in line with the pivot bolt, so the shrouds support the mast as it goes up. Usually by triangulating two chainplates.So no A frame needed.
But I guess Lakey's boat does not have the shrouds in line with the mast (no backstay) This would help the OP's MacW, as it must have a masthead rig.
BTW, The tabernacle replaced a fabricated bronze hinge arrangement that had twice distorted and dropped the mast, bit nerve making and not practicle on the water. The boat is trailed every time it is used and 'launch to sailing' is about 10 min. More time is spent parking and stashing the trailer.
Plenty of unstayed masts use tabernacles. Notable are several Bolger boats and the Norwalk Island Sharpies.
Andrew
Missed your reply, cooking and typing not good...
Others take care of the side loads by fabricating chain plates that put the attachment for the shrouds in line with the pivot bolt, so the shrouds support the mast as it goes up. Usually by triangulating two chainplates.So no A frame needed.
But I guess Lakey's boat does not have the shrouds in line with the mast (no backstay) This would help the OP's MacW, as it must have a masthead rig.
BTW, The tabernacle replaced a fabricated bronze hinge arrangement that had twice distorted and dropped the mast, bit nerve making and not practicle on the water. The boat is trailed every time it is used and 'launch to sailing' is about 10 min. More time is spent parking and stashing the trailer.
Plenty of unstayed masts use tabernacles. Notable are several Bolger boats and the Norwalk Island Sharpies.
Andrew
Missed your reply, cooking and typing not good...
Last edited: