I am the Class Secretary for the Belfast Lough One Design - Fairy Class. We have 11 boats all built in 1902. AS a class we are sailing and racing hard against one-another for only 3 months every year. We have 2 other boats currently underway restoration after many years ashore and the owners of them are beginning to look at rigs. The class have two old solid wood masts which have been dry-stored for many years. When we removed them to examine them there were signs of cracking along the grain in the timber.
I believe the masts are fir or spruce. Masts are 31 feet long. 28 feet above the deck. The rig is fractional Bermudian. The hounds are 10 ft from the head. They have single shrouds and running backstays to the hounds. So the top 10ft of mast is un-stayed, although there is an outer forestay which goes to the mast-head.
The diameter of the masts is 4 1/8" at the foot, 3 3/4" at the hounds and 2 1/2" at the head.
The cracks are 1/8" wide going to 3/4" deep although some are as long as 4ft. There are no places where the crack are on opposing sides most of the cracks are on what would be the aft facing side of the mast if erected.
I have attached some photos.
I have been reading with some hope many of the other threads in the forum, the thread about mast cracks being more than aesthetic was particularly helpful. However, I would appreciate some other expert views.
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