Mast Step is Aluminum...
Barry, I believe all the Cherubini's of the era used Kenyon Spars exclusively. I re-did the step on my 37C as my mast was corroded severly at the base. The actual mast step is an aluminum 356 alloy casting and is extremely corrossion resistant. It was fine when I unsteped the mast. The problem was that Hunter welded the 356 casting to a 6061 plate of aluminum that bolted to the keel bolts. The combination of metals at the keel bolts caused the plate to corrode and since the step was welded to it it was scraped as well. Some of the Kenyon Spars are stocked by Rig-right. They are at www.rigright.com and you may get lucky and get a new step as I did. I removed 2" off the base of my mast, machined a new plate and added a 2" solid aluminum spacer to get back to the original height and welded the new mast step on top. This gets you back to the original mast dimensions and keeps the base of your mast out of the bilge water. I etched and treated with aircraft primer and this is a job that will not ever have to be done again. As far as the standing rigging is concerned, check some of the more recent posts on this forum, it's covered pretty well. I aggree with what everyone is telling you but if you want to be sure, have some dye penetrant placed on your lower swages and check for cracks. This is the most vulnerable area due to crevace corrossion from moisture. If they look good and are in good shape otherwise your probably OK up top. Wire can fatigue in other ways as well and it is possible to proof load the rigging by a competent shop if you feel strongly about it. Typically this is done to 150% of the maximum working load of the wire. If it fails though, it's a destructive test so you'll have to replace it anyway, if a couple fail, you need to consider replacing the entire rig. Most people don't go to this trouble, so if it looks good and isn't cracked it'll last for a little longer.TomS/V Lite Chop