Express 27 Class Clinic #2 at Richmond Yacht ClubSeptember 12
Contact Person
Will Paxton
Looking for a Ride or Crew
 Jan (Jan)
تحليل دقيق! أؤيد وجهة النظر تمامًا! 1xbet (Apr 30 11:49 PM)
Boats Racing
#28137Motorcycle Irene (Will Paxton)
#28031Take Five (Don)
#72'Andale (Pat Brown)
#56Current Affair (Seth)
#28059Moonlight (Jim Gibbs)
#11Wile E Coyote (Dan)
#18364Peaches
#32215bobs (anthony murphy)
#60Salty Hotel (Sergey)
#113Libra (Marcia)
Sign Up
Sail Number
Boat Name
Name
Note

Note: To remove an entry fill in just your sail number or your name.
All fields are optional.
Regatta Message Board
Replying to this message
Reply | Post New Message | All Messages | this message is spam
Author: Jason Crowson ([email protected]) contact the author
Subject: Mast bend - How much?
Info: (21917 views) Posted: Sunday 8-7-11 09:58:56 AM
The best way to tell where the max mast bend is by looking at your main sail. You will develop a wrinkle from the clew up the sail towards the middle of the mast. When you start to see that wrinkle you know that more backstay is not going to help you.

Looking up the mast it shouldn't be more than 2-3 mast column widths when on full backstay. I have never heard of failure of our masts because of too much backstay. But, you should definitely release the backstay when you can to keep from inducing any pre-bend into the mast.

Hope that helps...

-Jason

:: How far can the mast be bent without risk of damage? Are
:: there any numbers? Maybe Inches of displacement sighting
:: up the mast or ammount of reduction in backstay length
:: from no bend to max, or something else?

:: Thanks

Reply | Post New Message | All Messages | this message is spam

Your Name
Your E-Mail (optional)
Subject
Password (optional - allows you to delete later)