T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
268.1 | Diagram correct? | SUMMIT::THOMAS | Ed Thomas | Tue Mar 25 1986 09:05 | 19 |
| RICK,
My impression is that the ends and the 12"interval holes will have
the track thru-bolted from the track, through the teak and the deck.
Your diagram shows these as only through the teak and deck. Is the
diagram wrong?
My understanding is that the close thru-bolting is to eliminate or
reduce changes in the track's shape. If you completely thru-bolt the
track to the deck as you plan I would think your plan would be
adequate. If the diagram is correct then I think you're putting
all the strain on the teak which I don't think is a good idea.
Remember, this is a Geography/Urban Studies major talking, not a
mechanical engineer.
The ideal solution would be to thru-bolt at all of the new locations.
What are your reservations about doing that?
Ed
|
268.2 | | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Tue Mar 25 1986 11:36 | 24 |
| Rick,
I would recommend you thrubolt at each 4" harken hole and plug the
misaligned 3" holes.
Incidentally, the traveller track on my boat is bolted only with
the outermost 3 holes (with steel backing plates) the rest of the
traveller (about 2" or so in the center) is unsupported. I have
a 300 sq.ft. main and have never noticed any binding, or flexing
of the track in the unsupported area, so maybe it isnt necessary
to secure the track if its rigid enough. Its also a Harken traveller,
the crosssection looks something like this.
__ __
\ -------- /
\ ____ /
/ / \ \
/ / \ \
/ /________\ \
|____________|
Good luck,
Walt
|
268.3 | correction to .2 | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Tue Mar 25 1986 11:38 | 4 |
| Re:.2
I wrote 2" as the unsupported area, I meant 2' (feet).
Walt
|
268.4 | harken traveller | ADS::MACKINNON | | Tue Mar 25 1986 12:03 | 13 |
| I own a wavelength 24, that I replaced the traveler system on two
years ago. The old system would bind up. I replaced the old system
with a Harken Blue car on the "high" profile track(recommended for
tracks that traverse open cockpits). I also installed bullet blocks
on each side of the car and also on the deck of the boat, also on
the deck I put an eyestrap. sounds a little complicated but in the
end I have a 2-1 system, which my wife can handle. Incidently, i
wrote harken and explained to them what i wanted to do, they inturn
recommended which model number blocks to use for my boat. Is harken
the right one to use?-harken is the "only" one to use!
Don
|
268.5 | hmmm... | RDF::RDF | Rick Fricchione | Wed Mar 26 1986 10:03 | 32 |
| Re .1: The diagram shows *only* the places where I cannot
thru-bolt. I intend to thrubolt whereever a hole lines
up. Remembering my 3rd grade math and least common
crud, this seems to be 12 for 3 and 4" holes.
The idea is that 5 bolts would go from track all the
thru the teak and deck and be secured to a baseplate
below. The holes which did not line up (4 "" from track)
would be brough down into the teak only (not further) by
countersinking the teak to accomodate a large washer and
bolt head while still keeping the teak block flush.
The 3" holes from the deck going up (left over from the
old system) would be used to secure the teak block in
the same manner. The teak holds the track at 4" intervals
and the deck holds the teak at 3" intervals. And *only*
for those locations that don't line up.
re Walt: I wouldn't mind redrilling new holes, but I hate to
make that section weaker by doing so. I'd also like
to put the old traveller back when I sell the boat.
I'd have to drill out the plugs I put in later and plug
the 4" holes I just made.
Right now it seems as if redrilling the holes is the easiest
alternative. Does it affect the strength of the glass
significantly? I'd think not, with a good backplate being used.
Rick
* Whose Computer Science/Corporate Finance major didn't prepare
me for this either.
|
268.6 | more questions and problems | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Wed Mar 26 1986 11:32 | 25 |
| Rick, Is the mounting surface on the boat reinforced, like with
plywood or balsa coring ?
These cores will do a nice job of spreading the backing plate loads
from the thru-bolt-every-12" bolts to a large area of deck. If
you have solid GRP here the load will be spread over the backing
plate area and thats about it. In the first case, using only
the 12" spaced holes for bolting, with backing plates, should give
you the strength you need (assuming you can get 4-5 bolts in and
the track is a high profile type which can span 12" without support).
Then you could just bed the teak and have it seal the unused holes
in the deck. If you have solid GRP though I recommend you thru
bolt as often as possible to spread the load as much as possible
(unless this area was specially reinforced with extra layers of
glass).
I tried to imagine how one would go about assembling the system
you described in .0 and cannot see how you can get to both ends
of each bolt with a wrench (except the ones every 12" that thrubolt).
How do you plan to keep the bolts who's heads are buried between
the traveller and teak from turning while they are tightened ?
Walt
|
268.7 | through bolt | PRORAT::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Mar 26 1986 12:40 | 38 |
| As a physicist by training (though no longer by profession), I would
like to offer a contrary view to the last reply.
If you have a balsa cored deck, you will crush the balsa when you
tighten the mounting bolts for a fitting that is through-bolted. Also,
heavily loading a through-bolted fitting will tend to crush the balsa.
Rather soon the mounting bolts will be loose. Every book and article I
have seen recommends cutting out the balsa and filling the hole with
either solid glass and resin (preferably) or with plywood (which is much
more crush resistant than balsa). In either case you need a backing plate
to spread the bolt loads over as large an area as possible.
I would recommend through bolting the traveler every 4" just as Harken
intends. They put the hole centers on 4" centers because they don't want
a failure. Neither do you. Mainsail sheet loads can be quite high.
Imagine the traveler car sitting over a mounting bolt. Neglecting the
strength of the track, that bolt is carrying the entire mainsheet load.
I don't know how big the mounting bolts are, but (give or take a bit)
the mainsheet load can exceed the safe working strength of a 1/4" bolt
(800 pounds is my estimate). By the way, you don't have to break
anything to have a failure. Your current traveler car binding is a
failure (it has deformed enough not to move). Cyclical heavy loads will
cause stress fatigue and eventual failure. They will also tend to break
the joint between the bolt and the bedding compound.
I would through bolt the traveler and sell it with the boat. The effort
of removing an N year old fitting to save a few dollars wouldn't be
worth it to me.
As an aside, the articles I have read lately (the one in TIME being the
most recent) about lawsuits for negligence have concerned us enough to
seriously consider no longer chartering our boat. There are simply too
many ways to hurt yourself on a boat, and it is hard to imagine that a
victim couldn't find a way to blame the negligent owner.
Alan
|
268.8 | in summary | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Wed Mar 26 1986 14:08 | 27 |
| Looks like the recommendation that is the first one out of each
reply is thru bolt it every 4" with a backing plate. You cannot
go wrong.
I think many of the other solutions can also work in some cases,
depending upon deck construction, traveller track design and the
piece of teak in between, but each is less trustworthy than the
consensus. Alan is right about removing it when you sell -
you shouldnt pick your next boat according to whether this track
will fit or not, and odds are you either wont need a new one or this
one wont fit anyway.
An aside on Alans response to the balsa core thing. He is correct
in that a balsa core can be crushed by the compression of thru-bolting
a fixture that carries heavy loads like a winch or traveller. In
this case the best solution would be to remove a balsa donut around
the hole and fill it with GRP. This takes the compression from
the bolt off the balsa. A backing plate larger than the donut will
then help distribute the sheet loads into the GRP/balsa sandwich
deck and here the balsa will help spread the load out over a larger
area than would be the case with solid GRP decking (again assuming
the deck was not specifically reinforced in this area with additional
roving or mat).
Walt
|
268.9 | deck reinforcing alternative? | SUMMIT::THOMAS | Ed Thomas | Wed Mar 26 1986 14:26 | 11 |
| re. GRP donuts
(Walt, by any chance, would you be of English extraction?)
Would it be simpler to reinforce the deck (underside) by glassing in 2
or 3 layers of tape or mat (which would be better?) that exceeded the
teak block dimensions by 2-3"? The backing plates would sit on this
deck reinforcement.
Ed
|
268.10 | if you could just turn the boat upside down | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Wed Mar 26 1986 15:44 | 29 |
| ED, I think that added mat/tape/roving reinforcement would be a
good idea under any conditions - except I hate trying to get the
stuff to defy gravity untill it sets up. The reinforcment donut
doesnt exactly go on by itself but being limited in size (as well
as easy to thicken with microballons) its a bit simpler to manage.
Besides, there is still the problem of thru bolt compressing the
balsa.
I watched a fellow install a Pedistal/Wheel steerer last spring
on a solid GRP cockpit sole. He first installed the unit and
the pedistal guard thru the sole to backing plates the size of the
pedistal and guard. We tugged at the top of the guard and watched
the deck flex immediately adjacent to the pedistal. He wasnt happy
with this and glassed in a 1" piece of plywood under about half the
cockpit sole. I stayed away during this time (working on my boats
bottom) but recall a lot of explitives while he was trying to get
the saturated roving to stay up untill it cured. He even had to
cut himself loose from the boat one day after some of his hair dried
in a glop of resin on the hull, while he was pushing parts of the
cloth back up. Anyway, the result was impressive. The added GRP
and plywood virtually eliminated any movement of the pedistal, and
when pressed to move, the deck flexed over a wide area (the load
was spread).
(Do I write with an English accent ? Actually I have Scottish
ancestry)
Walt
|
268.11 | making a donut | PRORAT::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Mar 26 1986 15:49 | 14 |
| Fiberglass (more correctly, GRP) is not all that stiff in panels. Three
layers of 1.5 oz matt alternated with four layers of 7.5 oz cloth is only
about 0.125 inch thick and is quite flexible. One way to make a donut
compression pad is to drill a one inch diameter hole with a hole saw
through the underside of the deck and the balsa (the top layer of
fiberglass is usually a good bit thicker than the bottom layer). Slap a
strip of duct tape over the hole (from below) and then fill the cavity
from above (through the 1/4 inch pilot hole for the hole saw) with
epoxy, thickened with microspheres or some such is you'd like. Presto,
a glued in place donut.
Alan
|
268.12 | | SUMMIT::THOMAS | Ed Thomas | Wed Mar 26 1986 17:51 | 18 |
| re. .10
I've only seen "GRP" used by British writers so I was wondering
if you were English. Actually, from my perspective, you speak with
a distinct VT200 accent.
I'll make sure I wear a hat when working the sticky stuff!!
re .11
I didn't realize the tape and mat would be that thin AND I was assuming
they'd add considerable stiffness. Hopefully, my store of ignorance
on working with GRP will be reduced by the end of May. My only
experience is taping in some plywood shelves in the cavern 'neath
the cockpit on the ol' Pearson 26. Pretty tame stuff
Gotta run...
Ed
|
268.13 | also wear the proper respirator!!! | DPHILL::HTINK | | Thu Mar 27 1986 10:12 | 12 |
| Ed - instead of using tape (too thin and flexible) use roving (looks
like
straw matting, much thicker than tape). Also, thr trick in glassing
overhead is too use as little resin as possible, which in turn means
you need the proper rollers to saturate the mat-roving-mat-roving-mat
layers. I have the rollers if you want to borrow them, I may have
some roving kicking around...
Henk (who build his own GRP 30 footer from scratch - never
again...unless it's a 45 footer).
|
268.14 | *decision* | RDF::RDF | Rick Fricchione | Thu Mar 27 1986 12:13 | 22 |
| Hmmm... the donut idea seems pretty smart. Kind of like the old
reinforcers on notebook paper.
The consensus seems to be to thrubolt at 4" and worry
about removal and replacement of the old system (if that happens)
later. Its probably easier in the long run. I *might* be able
to get by with every 12", but if drilling a few more holes will
eliminate any risk Ill do it. Ill bed the teak and plug the old
holes.
Re .6: I know what you mean. It would probably have to be assembled
such that the traveller goes to the teak, and then the combination
to the deck. Since I'm probably not going to do it, I won't spend
to much time figuring that one out. I hadn't given the process
much thought.
Rick
* Proof that any simple idea can be made complex if you try hard
enough.
|
268.15 | back to the binding traveller | 11550::MEIDELL | | Tue Apr 01 1986 17:33 | 22 |
| I just read all the interesting info about 'glassing, and so. Very
good info. After all is said and done, your Harken traveller system
may still bind. Assure that when the boom is centered, the line
drawn from the traveller car to the boom attachment angles at least
slightly aft.
The typical binding problem is when the sheet is tightened hard
while upwind. When you go to spill some air by releasing the traveller
a bit, you find you need to kick it, etc. The problem can be easily
seen by drawing a crude "T" and follow a point in front of the
traveller as is traverses, and then behind it. "Aha!" you say. "There
is a cause of binding, but if the attachment is behind the traveller,
it will bind bringing the traveller to weather from a reach (or
a wind spill)!" Well...yes, but you usually don't have the main
sheeted that hard on the reach, and so there is slack there, and
on an ease, you don't adjust the sheet anyway.
Now for all you who are about to yell and scream about how wonderful
the Harken stuff is... you're right... I use it too, but just because
gear is engineered to work well under severe stress is no reason
to attempt to stress it any more than need be.
|
268.16 | avoiding binding -- another way | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Apr 02 1986 18:35 | 29 |
| -------------------------------------
| boom | gooseneck
-------------------------------------
block 1 block 2 block 3
\ \ / /----------------|
\ \ / / |
\ \ / / |
\ \ / / |
traveller |
fiddle block |
| turning block
cockpit winch <----------------------
This mainsheet sheeting arrangement seems to avoid traveller binding
problems on all points of sail, at least on our 32' boat with a six year
old OEM_not_latest_and_greatest traveller. The sheet begins at the
becket on block 2, down to the upper sheave on the traveler fiddle
block, up to block 1, back to the lower sheaves on the fiddle block, up
to block 2, on to block 3 at the boom gooseneck, down to the deck
turning block, and back to the cockpit winch. As long as the blocks and
traveller bearings are kept nicely lubricated, the traveller car can be
moved fairly easily, even close hauled with the lee rail down. The boat
arrived from the builder with this system, and since it works, we
haven't changed it. Of course, going from a broad reach to close hauled,
you get to marvel at the niceness of a self-tailing mainsheet winch for
a long, long time as you crank and crank and crank. Since the boom
blocks are actually at midboom, the 4:1 purchase is not too little close
hauled in a breeze.
|
268.17 | ....and another | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Thu Apr 03 1986 10:34 | 19 |
| A good boom vang installation will do a lot to unload the mainsheet
upwind. I found that the traveller only became difficult on our
boat when I was trying to use the mainsheet to control sail shape
instead of using it to set angle of attack to the wind and using
the vang and backstay to set the shape.
When we got our boat it had no vang and a 5:1 mainsheet 3:1 traveller.
I was tempted to go to a 7:1 sheet because of the work I had to
put in to the sheet to control the sail up wind in a breeze. Once
shaped you could forget pulling the traveller to windward. A friend
who raced Tartan 10s suggested the vang instead of a new sheet system.
He felt it would ease the strain when close hauled and certainly
give me better control reaching and running. He was absolutely correct.
Aside from the speed increases off the wind, my wife (half my size)
can sheet the main single handed in the same conditions that I used
to use both hands and a braced foot.
Walt
|