AntarcticPilot
Well-Known Member
This is just thinking aloud!As I said the triatic only stops the mizzen falling over backwards, and the only force making it do that is the mizzen main sheet when taut. The forward pair of mizzen side stays should be more than enough for that with a relatively small mizzen sail and short boom.
Brigantines with large mizzen sail and often clew on boom behind boat, had a much greater loading, and thus often a triatic.
Some folk used triatic aerials, but thats not really load bearing
Doesn't the triatic stay work like a backstay for the main, spreading the forward pressure on the mainmast through the mizzen shrouds as well as the main shrouds? Just picturing it, it seems to me that the triatic stay in combination with the mizzen shrouds would have a better mechanical advantage than the main shrouds alone. Of course, that presumes that the mizzen shrouds are sized to take the additional loading - the only ketch I know at all well has much lighter standing rigging on the mizzen than on the main, so it wouldn't work on her (a Westerly 31')
