i have owned two sailboats and added a mast raising system to both of them.
the system is very similar in operation to the macgregor mast raising system....
on my current boat, i have raised and lowered the mast many, many times, and even bounced the mast as it hung from the system when testing it after I built and installed it....
then... after is has been working flawlessly for the past year, i went to raise the mast on friday, and just as i was beginning to take the load on the rigging to lift the mast out of the crutch, the tabernacle suddnely pulled loose from the cabintop:cry:....
it did not pull completely out because i was just beginning to take the strain, but it peeled up a couple of inches and tore the fiberglass. but if i would have had the mast in the air 6ft and it gave way, it would have been a disaster.....
unlike hand raising, the raising system creates a lot of forward pull on the mast/tabernacle until it becomes more erect, and it was this initial pull that caused the tabernacle to peel forward.
upon inspection and closer study, I realized there was only one 1/4"bolt holding the rear of the tabernacle to the cabintop, but two at the front.
it NEEDS to have the two bolts to the rear to support the stress created as the mast starts up....
but in addition to only having one bolt at the rear, none of the bolts had any washers or other backing hardware under the nuts..... so the little 1/4" nut was free to pull thru as it pleased....
i feel fortunate to have found this out without a catastrophic event to my rigging, but it would have been better to have done a thorough inspection and rebedding of the tabernacle myself and prevented this from happening.
the tabernacle on your boat may be fine for hand raising/stepping the mast, but when using a raising system, there is more stress added that should be addressed before the problems arise
the event set me back about 40 minutes, but didnt ruin my weekend, as i carry a couple spare backing plates for when I need to add a piece of hardware, or something like this arises.
i removed the old bolt and used a longer one and pulled it all back into place and clamped it down with a backing plate like it should have been to begin with.
but i will have to do a more extensive repair to the glass when i get the boat home to insure a good watertight seal.....
the system is very similar in operation to the macgregor mast raising system....
on my current boat, i have raised and lowered the mast many, many times, and even bounced the mast as it hung from the system when testing it after I built and installed it....
then... after is has been working flawlessly for the past year, i went to raise the mast on friday, and just as i was beginning to take the load on the rigging to lift the mast out of the crutch, the tabernacle suddnely pulled loose from the cabintop:cry:....
it did not pull completely out because i was just beginning to take the strain, but it peeled up a couple of inches and tore the fiberglass. but if i would have had the mast in the air 6ft and it gave way, it would have been a disaster.....
unlike hand raising, the raising system creates a lot of forward pull on the mast/tabernacle until it becomes more erect, and it was this initial pull that caused the tabernacle to peel forward.
upon inspection and closer study, I realized there was only one 1/4"bolt holding the rear of the tabernacle to the cabintop, but two at the front.
it NEEDS to have the two bolts to the rear to support the stress created as the mast starts up....
but in addition to only having one bolt at the rear, none of the bolts had any washers or other backing hardware under the nuts..... so the little 1/4" nut was free to pull thru as it pleased....
i feel fortunate to have found this out without a catastrophic event to my rigging, but it would have been better to have done a thorough inspection and rebedding of the tabernacle myself and prevented this from happening.
the tabernacle on your boat may be fine for hand raising/stepping the mast, but when using a raising system, there is more stress added that should be addressed before the problems arise
the event set me back about 40 minutes, but didnt ruin my weekend, as i carry a couple spare backing plates for when I need to add a piece of hardware, or something like this arises.
i removed the old bolt and used a longer one and pulled it all back into place and clamped it down with a backing plate like it should have been to begin with.
but i will have to do a more extensive repair to the glass when i get the boat home to insure a good watertight seal.....