DannyB
Well-Known Member
This may be familiar to some, but it's new to me. Walking down the pontoon towards the boat yesterday, I could hear a droning noise apparently coming from my boat. It came and went, reminiscent of that scene in Crocodile Dundee II where he climbs to the top of a cliff and whirls a bit of wood round his head on a string, as some kind of bush telegraph. I knew there could be nothing running on board, and when I climbed on, I could see the topping lift vibrating like a violin string, and the noise appeared to be coming out of the boom. When I put my hand on the topping lift, the vibration stopped along with the noise. It was absolutely flat calm at the time, not even enough wind to turn the indicator at the top of the mast, so what would cause the vibration? The line was under tension, it was carrying the weight of the boom, plus the main sheet was holding the boom central, but where did the energy come from to start the vibration? I'm assuming once it started there must have been some sympathetic resonance within the boom to sustain it. I've had the boat for six years and never heard this before.