Engineering.
a mast with loose shrouds let to stand upright for a period of six months in a state where the wind can reach 70 mph on any given day.
and you are telling us that nothing happens?
we are talking about storage of a boat with the mast up - ie.
no crew attached.
Standing Rigging Basics
For starters, there's no hard and fast rule about how often a boat needs new rigging. The only rule is this: eventually it all needs to be replaced—
wire, toggles, turnbuckles, clevis pins, swage fittings, and couplings. Standing rigging will obviously last longer in relatively benign, freshwater environments. In the semi-tropics, however, many surveyors recommend that rigging be replaced every 5 years. Most rig failures are caused by corrosion, which can lead to
metal fatigue. Rigging professionals say that 99 percent of the time the lower terminal is the weakest link. While on
rare occasion the wire itself can also fail—usually due to an alignment problem or a wearing problem — the bottom line is vigilance when it comes to keeping the rig up.
enough said...
I was trying to help the guy not give him a college education on metal fatigue
Good Luck
edited by: ghhm43, May 28, 2008 - 12:20 PM
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Gordon
Nacra 5.5SL
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