H30 Mast Tune

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C

Charlie

To the Hunter World - I would like to tune up my rigging in a few weeks after things have warmed up here. I have a mast that looks to be curved too much and has a 2 ft rake at the boom level. Does anyone have any figures for the shroud and stay tensions, curvature and rake? Has anyone used an adjustable backstay tensioner? Thanks for your help.
 
Dec 10, 2003
158
Hunter 30_88-94 Edmonds, WA
Mast Tune

Check the archives. I wrote several articles about tuning and triming a couple of years ago for the sail trim forum; search under my name. They should include formulas for rake too (which is not the same as bend. Two feet is not excessive for a Hunter. The best resource by far is Brion Toss's video Tuning Your Rig, available from his website. The tensions are all a function of shroud diameter, so you need a caliper gauge and a Loose gauge for tuning. Lot's of people are afraid of it, but it isn't that hard.
 
S

Stu Sauer

Adjustable Backstay Tensioner

I added a split backstay adjuster with a 4:1 vang doubled through it's lower sheave to an 8:1 on my Hunter 28.5. It can easily crank in 4 inches of additional mast bend to flatten the mainsail in conjunction with full tension on the outhaul. Of course , on a mast head rig this also decreases sag in the headstay which flattens the Genoa and pulls the draft forward in the Genoa. This can result in increased difficulty in 'staying in the groove' as you steer up wind. The boat should be more forgiving with a little headstay sag. Your other issue of mast rake is more a function of how much or how little weather helm you experience. Increasing mast rake usually increases weather helm, and too much weather helm causes you to use more rudder and slows the boat. You and/or your sailmaker should evaluate how your mainsail fits your mast with the mast bend at its normal position and no additional backstay tension from the adjustable backstay. Your mast could have been set in place by an inexperienced yard crew , or the rake changed as a result of a change in the headstay or an impropper roller furler installation. If you can find a copy, an excelent book which includes these issues in tuning a rig is: "Designed to Win" by Roger Marshall, published by W.W. Norton & Company 1979.
 
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