Mast info assistance needed

Dec 4, 2013
22
Hunter 27 Lavilla Cove Marina
1980 Hunter 27. Can anyone provide a cross section sketch of the mast. I plan to haul out in a couple of weeks to rewire the mast and add vhf antenna. I am assuming the wiring channel is part of the mast extrusion. Is there enough space to house the nav wiring and adding a RG8 (index finger size) cable for the vhf?
 
Nov 10, 2012
62
Catalina 36 mkII Havre de Grace, Maryland
This is my mast from 1980 Hunter 30. I would imagine it would be similar.
 

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Jun 2, 2004
5,802
Hunter 37-cutter, '79 41 23' 30"N 82 33' 20"W--------Huron, OH
You should be able to find that info in a Search. The H30 looks like my H37C, there is a wiring channel behind the track and the track slides out for rewiring. But I seem to remember that H27 wiring was inside the mast. . . .maybe.
 
Jun 5, 2010
1,123
Hunter 25 Burlington NJ
I only wish I had a nice setup like Ed has!

I made my own 'wiring conduit' as my mast (Kenyon 3650; the 'teardrop') didn't have one. First I made it out of heavy-wall plastic electrical conduit: weight acceptable, but too big OD and too small ID. I tried 3/4" PVC: too big OD. Finally I went with 1/2" CPVC, which has a thinner wall, is lightweight, and is down-and-dirty cheap (total cost for this arrangement: $7.50). In this I got two yellow grounds and four signal wires, all 14-gauge, plus a run of 18/2 for the anemometer sender, and the VHF cable. A word to the wise: do not bundle the wires with tape. Oh; they'll still give you trouble getting them out; but they won't even fit in a tight tube. I just pulled it through a foot at a time and went to the other end to remove the tape as the wires entered the tube.

Then I pulled the whole thing into the mast when ran new chase strings for the new halyards. If I remember rightly, the VHF departs from the tube well above the bottom, as the 12VDC and the VHF exit on opposite sides. By some miracle only the internal pole lift, which did not exist originally, is a potential twist around the conduit; and I haven't rigged the boat like this yet and will unravel it when I reeve new halyards. The CPVC is wired against the forward corner of the mast with SS seizing wire at the (now unused) spreader-light wires' exit and with a sheet-metal screw at the very top, immediately below the masthead crane. Otherwise it just sort of stands there by virtue of the wires themselves (none of this weighs very much; and where can it go?).

This seems clumsy but it beats the original arrangement, which was five wires in a-- wait for it-- 5/8" clear-plastic (but completely smeared in mold) plastic aquarium hose. Way to go, Hunter Marlboro!