roaringgirl
Well-Known Member
Hi All, I have a 40 yr old Selden mast on a 40ft blue-water cruiser. I recently pulled the mast out and it's lying beside the boat on the hard. We cracked one of the spreader brackets getting the spreaders off, so I had a rigger look at getting me another one. After looking at it, he suggested that I might want to consider a new mast. I now have a quote for that, and given the cost, I'm trying to make very sure that it is necessary before going ahead.
There is no physical damage to the mast section at any point as far as I can tell, no dings or dents. The main concern is galvanic corrosion - at the join between the 2 sections just above the spreaders and at the rivet holes where the un-insulated steps run up each side. Obviously if aluminium corrodes forever, all the metal turns to powder and the mast disintegrates, so I must try and assess how much material has been lost to corrosion and how much loss is acceptable. I'm currently trying to find some good rule-of thumb calculations for rig-loading and bending, which I could perhaps use in conjunction with the section's I-value, size and wall-thickness.
The two separate riggers who have looked at it so far have ummed an erred and (understandably) not wanted to give a firm decision either way about whether or not a new mast is required.
Assuming that I can get an endoscope inside the mast and have a good look around, can anyone give me some practical advice about what is ok and what is not ok? Can anyone give me any good practical sources of information for mast-load calculations?
Thanks
Charlie
There is no physical damage to the mast section at any point as far as I can tell, no dings or dents. The main concern is galvanic corrosion - at the join between the 2 sections just above the spreaders and at the rivet holes where the un-insulated steps run up each side. Obviously if aluminium corrodes forever, all the metal turns to powder and the mast disintegrates, so I must try and assess how much material has been lost to corrosion and how much loss is acceptable. I'm currently trying to find some good rule-of thumb calculations for rig-loading and bending, which I could perhaps use in conjunction with the section's I-value, size and wall-thickness.
The two separate riggers who have looked at it so far have ummed an erred and (understandably) not wanted to give a firm decision either way about whether or not a new mast is required.
Assuming that I can get an endoscope inside the mast and have a good look around, can anyone give me some practical advice about what is ok and what is not ok? Can anyone give me any good practical sources of information for mast-load calculations?
Thanks
Charlie