G
Greg
Having prepared everything I had in my mind for our Gulfstream crossing and sailing to the Bahamas I expected nothing less than smooth sailing. The weather was perfect 10-15 knots from the east/south east, few clouds, 2-4 foot waves. In all nothing that Mac cannot handle. As soon as we cleared the reefs we hoisted my new main sail from FX sails. Everything was fine, we tacked a few times to put us on the right course. We plotted the final course, tightened the main a bit more and enjoyed bueatiful night sailing. Suddenly I witnessed all the main sail slides popp out of the mast starting from the middle and going in opposite directions. With the main sail attached to the mast only at the tip the mast snapped in half and collapsed. Everything lasted maybe 5 seconds. We surgically tide everything to the deck so at the end nothing was damaged, exept the mast, and headed back to shore. Having experienced this I have some questions about what happened and need some recommendations if it goes to finding another mast.My suspission is that the slides I received with the new sail were just too small. They were smaller than the ones on my old sail. I checked if the slides held and they did but I guess not strong enough. Should the mast brake at all after all the slides popped out? Any suggestions about what happened?Another thing is the mast replacement.the original mast from macgregor is 28 foot long and 3 by 4 inches in diameter. My immediate options are to get a new mast from macgregor or to get one from Dwyer Aluminnum. They make good replacement extursions. In the mean time I already got hold of a used mast but it is 3 by 5 in diameter. Any ideas and suggestion about putting a slightly bigger mast ( not longer)?Will the weight make a significant difference?Will the weight make the boat too top heavy?Any benefits in having a bigger mast?I guess it will be a bit stronger than the original one.Any downsides in heaving a bigger mast?Any suggestions will be greatly appreciated. Thanks......