by hectoretc » Mon Oct 10, 2011 10:00 am
Agreeing yet again with everything stated above. I purchased and installed a tabernacle this summer from D&R after my first successful, but very stressful experience of levitating the mast verically like balancing a pool cue in the palm of your hand trying to lower it into the cuddy blowhole by myself. No wind that day, and simply could not imagine trying it in any kind of sidewind. There can't be too much worse of a sinking feeling than watching the mast tip beyond your ability to control it, and hoping there isn't anything in that 25 foot radius of your boat that is going to be expensive to replace, let alone the mast itself. After that experience, the slop in the tabernacle hinge is a a welcome difference from the whole mast wanting to tip this way and that. Not specifically stated above, but perhaps already known/assumed is that you should insure to have the sidestays attached before you raise the mast, thereby helping to center it, the higher you raise it, and as I was instructed, it's also a very good idea to use the main or jib halyard to assist in the raising/stabilizing process to hold the mast forward until the forward tabernacle pin and headstay can be attached.
For me, the only uncomfortable part of the tabernacle process remaining is that becuase of the natural slop (or flex) built into it, when the mast is raised and vertical, you need to actually pull back on it to get the forward pin inserted into the tabernacle. It feels kind of counter stablizing to be pulling the mast back (moving toward the unstable position) to get the pin in. You have to be looking down to get the pin in with one hand while trying to pull back on the the mast with the other, but not wanting to let it go too far. Maybe I should be locking down the headstay first before inserting the pin?
I am thinking I read a post elsewhere in this forum where someone had installed some shims in the tabernacle hinge making the foward tabernacle pin "line up" when the mast is stood up. I need to re-find that to see if there was more specifics given.
DS #6127 - Breakin' Wind - From the land of 10,000 lakes, which spend 80% of the year frozen it seems...