Surprisingly non-catastrophic rig failure
Posted: Tue Oct 24, 2017 4:21 am
My whole mast came down while it on a mooring last month, and I thought some people here may be interested in what went wrong. (Spoiler - it's quite easily fixable and there is no damage to mast or hull.)
First of all, I had a very bent turnbuckle because it got twisted as I was raising the mast earlier this year. I was going to get a new part over the winter and replace it in the spring. The other aggravating factor was that my shrouds were a little on the loose side.
The boat was on a mooring at a nearby lake and we had a few windy days - nothing too dramatic - maybe 25-30 knots or so. I went out with the trailer the following week to bring it in for the winter and saw that the mast was down.
So what happened? The bent turnbuckle on the outer shroud broke. Then the spreaders pulled out, letting the inner shrouds go. I'm not entirely sure what failed. The bolt that holds the shroud connector was a little bent, the nut had come off, one of the metal sleeves inside the spreader was missing and the small screw that holds the spreader in place was loose. Neither shroud was connected to the mast. I can't tell in which order these things failed, but the spreaders came apart and the inner shrouds were only held on by the spreaders. The inner shroud tangs were not riveted to the mast.
So then the mast fell over. The mast base plate was badly bent, the pin jammed and the mast base casting was torn like cardboard.
So the good news is that the deck and the mast are both good as new. The mast base, mast step and spreader base can be replaced at reasonable cost. The inner shroud has a few loose wires from it's trauma, so I'll replace that. And I'll replace all 4 shroud turnbuckles - the lower toggle part at least. Oh, and I lost the Windex as well. I might replace that with a no-name version.
So the moral of the story: don't neglect a bent turnbuckle. Not even on small boat on a small lake with no danger of extreme winds.
First of all, I had a very bent turnbuckle because it got twisted as I was raising the mast earlier this year. I was going to get a new part over the winter and replace it in the spring. The other aggravating factor was that my shrouds were a little on the loose side.
The boat was on a mooring at a nearby lake and we had a few windy days - nothing too dramatic - maybe 25-30 knots or so. I went out with the trailer the following week to bring it in for the winter and saw that the mast was down.
So what happened? The bent turnbuckle on the outer shroud broke. Then the spreaders pulled out, letting the inner shrouds go. I'm not entirely sure what failed. The bolt that holds the shroud connector was a little bent, the nut had come off, one of the metal sleeves inside the spreader was missing and the small screw that holds the spreader in place was loose. Neither shroud was connected to the mast. I can't tell in which order these things failed, but the spreaders came apart and the inner shrouds were only held on by the spreaders. The inner shroud tangs were not riveted to the mast.
So then the mast fell over. The mast base plate was badly bent, the pin jammed and the mast base casting was torn like cardboard.
So the good news is that the deck and the mast are both good as new. The mast base, mast step and spreader base can be replaced at reasonable cost. The inner shroud has a few loose wires from it's trauma, so I'll replace that. And I'll replace all 4 shroud turnbuckles - the lower toggle part at least. Oh, and I lost the Windex as well. I might replace that with a no-name version.
So the moral of the story: don't neglect a bent turnbuckle. Not even on small boat on a small lake with no danger of extreme winds.