charles_reed
Well-Known Member
Good lateral thinking Nigel - the boom position is, in fact 30mm higher than on the original mast and there is more than adequate clearance for my 1842mm height.
However:
Lowering the boom would require changing/shortening the gas-strut and/or re-fixing its lower cleat farther down the mast. That would require drilling out and redrilling 10 large monel rivets and 3 bolts on the gooseneck and 8 rivets on the vang fixing. These are large rivets, requiring a pantograph or power riveter. Whilst I've got a breast-operation riveter doing those rivets is right at the limit of its capacity.
Additionally, the FMEA we did on the original fracture suggested that the juxtaposition of the vang fixing to the restraint of the coachroof cap was a significant factor in the work-hardening and subsequent fatigue-fracture of the original mast.
For this reason it was one of the first solutions to be evaluated and rejected.
However:
Lowering the boom would require changing/shortening the gas-strut and/or re-fixing its lower cleat farther down the mast. That would require drilling out and redrilling 10 large monel rivets and 3 bolts on the gooseneck and 8 rivets on the vang fixing. These are large rivets, requiring a pantograph or power riveter. Whilst I've got a breast-operation riveter doing those rivets is right at the limit of its capacity.
Additionally, the FMEA we did on the original fracture suggested that the juxtaposition of the vang fixing to the restraint of the coachroof cap was a significant factor in the work-hardening and subsequent fatigue-fracture of the original mast.
For this reason it was one of the first solutions to be evaluated and rejected.