lw395
Well-Known Member
Is the boat floating or ashore?
I have been involved with doing this on keelboats, so half the size, but a wooden mast (so not light as such), and only two people needed. We build a tripod and lift the mast near its balance point.
It is quite scary when the boat rocks at all. If you wanted to scale this up, it would be pretty serious stuff.
If afloat, move to a crane/bridge/hiab lorry on tall quay at low water.
If ashore, just maybe possible with some SERIOUS scaffolding. (braced to a solid building perhaps?) In the limit, this is possible, but either scary or expensive or both.
Other than that, Chinook!
Or lower the hull down a mineshaft!
Perhaps if you explained further why a crane is not an option, we could help.
Perhaps you could find out what the weight really is, then consider things that are not quite cranes, e.g. cherry picker, manitou, agri fork lift, fire engine?
As a really off the wall thought, is it one piece or sleeve jointed? Do you see where this is heading? Don't go there without talking to a rig man!
I have been involved with doing this on keelboats, so half the size, but a wooden mast (so not light as such), and only two people needed. We build a tripod and lift the mast near its balance point.
It is quite scary when the boat rocks at all. If you wanted to scale this up, it would be pretty serious stuff.
If afloat, move to a crane/bridge/hiab lorry on tall quay at low water.
If ashore, just maybe possible with some SERIOUS scaffolding. (braced to a solid building perhaps?) In the limit, this is possible, but either scary or expensive or both.
Other than that, Chinook!
Or lower the hull down a mineshaft!
Perhaps if you explained further why a crane is not an option, we could help.
Perhaps you could find out what the weight really is, then consider things that are not quite cranes, e.g. cherry picker, manitou, agri fork lift, fire engine?
As a really off the wall thought, is it one piece or sleeve jointed? Do you see where this is heading? Don't go there without talking to a rig man!