CLP
Well-Known Member
Apologies if I have missed something in the discussion about compression in the mast when the boat is on its beam ends, but I thought that with the mast horizontal, the compression load in the mast will be W/2sin theta, (assuming for the moment no initial rig tension at all, and a single shroud to the top of the mast)
Where:
W = weight of mast
theta = angle of stay at top of mast
So for a mast of say 150 kg and theta of 10 degrees, the compression will be 431.9 kg (nearly 3 times the actual mast weight). The smaller theta gets the bigger the compression gets.
Add to this the resolved mast componants of rig tensions and then the inertia loads, and the compression force can get quite large.
Where:
W = weight of mast
theta = angle of stay at top of mast
So for a mast of say 150 kg and theta of 10 degrees, the compression will be 431.9 kg (nearly 3 times the actual mast weight). The smaller theta gets the bigger the compression gets.
Add to this the resolved mast componants of rig tensions and then the inertia loads, and the compression force can get quite large.