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Date Posted: - Tuesday - 07/21/09 - 2:03pm
Author: Randall, Murre, M31
Subject: It bends aft...mine too
In reply to: Lyle Harris 's message, "mast curvature" on - Tuesday - 07/21/09 - 11:42am

If you'll look through owner photos on the MOA site, you'll notice that the bend in the main is fairly common, though I can't tell why. The original drawings suggest it wasn't designed that way.

All the fore and aft ***taper*** in the mast is on the fore side, so maybe this creates an ocular effect that encourages us to work in a bend over the years. Or maybe it was a fashion statement by a cadre of J-boat enthralled riggers. I've always thought the aft bend on Murre was due to a head sail roller rig that was cut too big. Who knows?

You can work most of the bend out, assuming you have enough of a run on your fore and backstay turnbuckles. But even with most of it out of Murre's main, the taper in the mast means the jib halyard still rests on the fore end of the spreader hardware. I have a rope to wire halyard on the jib that is bar taught; it's the wire that rests against the spreader tang, and it doesn't move, so I've not worried much about it.

If you've got all rope, you might stitch a bit of leather onto the chafing part of the halyard.

Good Luck,

RR

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