Moderator: GreenLake
K.C. Walker wrote:For attaching the tangs to the mast, rivets are way stronger. There’s not enough wall thickness in the mast to hold threads. Pop rivets are easy to drill out because the center hole guides the drill bit. Of course, the aluminum ones are far easier to drill out than the stainless ones. One does need a pretty heavy duty riveter for the 3/16 stainless rivets, though. A lot of the aluminum rivets on my boat are still holding after 35+ years. I did have a boom bail for the main sheet break off last summer with no sign of problems before hand. The aluminum rivets were all sheared. Dwyer Mast uses stainless steel rivets and when I inquired about anticorrosion they said, “sure, you can do that but we don’t”. I use LanoCote.
Breakin Wind wrote:
So... just to get the question out of the way, would it be an incredibly bad or foolish (could be both I guess) idea to use three long stainless steel screws and locking nuts passed through the mast to attach both sidestay tangs (on the same screws)?
Thanks - Scott
GreenLake wrote:This is only simple if the tangs are located opposite of each other across the widest part of the profile. I can't check things on my mast right now, but on the DS the spreaders are swept back, which means that the shrouds don't actually pull in the same plane. It would make sense for the tangs to be mounted a bit behind the widest point of the mast profile to put them in line with the actual pull from the shrouds. If that was done, you would not have a perpendicular direction for your bolt, but it would be angled. That could be an issue.
GreenLake wrote:(As a total aside, and just because I mentioned this episode, he did this for free and refused payment even for the new fitting, which he himself had located and purchased at a boating store in a nearby town. I was new to sailing then, and far from competent in what now, to me, would be an ordinary repair. This has definitely inspired me to find ways I can "return" this favor by helping out others where opportunity presents itself.)
K.C. Walker wrote:For attaching the tangs to the mast, rivets are way stronger. There’s not enough wall thickness in the mast to hold threads. Pop rivets are easy to drill out because the center hole guides the drillbit. Of course, the aluminum ones are far easier to drill out than the stainless ones. One does need a pretty heavy duty riveter for the 3/16 stainless rivets, though. A lot of the aluminum rivets on my boat are still holding after 35+ years. I did have a boom bail for the main sheet break off last summer with no sign of problems before hand. The aluminum rivets were all sheared. Dwyer Mast uses stainless steel rivets and when I inquired about anticorrosion they said, “sure, you can do that but we don’t”. I use LanoCote.
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