[Rhodes22-list] Coming Aboard and Mast Raising questions
Ric Stott
ric at stottarchitecture.com
Mon Nov 4 11:29:33 EST 2024
Welcome Paul
You’ve made a good choice as long as you have no intention of going off-shore for and extended distance or time.
Although some Rhodies have cruised on long trips including the Gulf of Mexico and entire Med.., the 22 is a day and weekend sailboat in my world.
I had considered a mast stepped Gin pole and was about the embark on that journey when I was offered a free home made system, which although a bit funky works pretty well.
About 6 years ago I screwed down a temporary mahogany pivot post near the front of the the coach roof expecting to replace it with Starboard or some other composite - its still there and working fine.
I think the mast step Gin pole is a viable idea and it should work but other Rhodies might have tried it with different results.
The system is simple and easy to construct if you have one to model. There are quite a few Rhodes 22’s in your area or near enough to check out.
Good luck and enjoy your boat.
Ric
Dadventure
Hampton Bays, NY
Richard F. Stott, AIA, LEED AP
ric at stottarchitecture.com
O -631-283-1777
C- 516-965-3164
> On Nov 4, 2024, at 10:38 AM, Paul Rhodes <plrhodes29 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Good morning All,
>
> Permission to come aboard? We - Paul and Nancy Rhodes of Chapin SC and
> Savannah GA - are the proud new owners of a 1990 Rhodes 22, purchased from
> a delightful couple in Delaware. (They are also on this list and I haven't
> asked permission to use their names, so I'll just leave it as delightful,
> which they are.) Nancy and I are looking forward to the fellowship and
> experience of the Rhodes 22 Owners Group!
>
> First, though I share initials with the famous Philip L Rhodes, I haven't
> yet found any familial link. I'll keep looking! Actually pictures of him
> remind me of pictures of my paternal grandfather, so there may be a shared
> gene or two from the distant past, but I'm not making any claims.
>
> As I joked with Stan Spitzer at our one meeting about 5 years ago in
> Edenton, one benefit for me of purchasing a Rhodes 22 is that it makes me
> an honest man. For about 25 years, Nancy and I have owned a pirated
> Rhodes-designed boat. The Cheoy Lee Offshore 40 was apparently slightly
> modified from the Rhodes Reliant and claimed as a new in-house Cheoy Lee
> design. Both classes were simultaneously built side by side in Hong Kong,
> to the displeasure of McCurdy and Rhodes. The Offshore 40 has been a great
> boat (credit to Rhodes), but as we move to get more sailing and less
> maintenance, expense, etc., it feels good to be able to say we really own a
> Rhodes-designed boat.
>
> I joined the Facebook group the other day, and was delighted to see that
> someone is tending Stan's old email address at least in order to sell
> whatever parts and accessories may still be in stock. I've sent an email
> there, and I'll also ask here:
> Does anyone have a universal mast raising system (the one that can be used
> without the trailer), a bimini, and/or a Boom Room to sell, in that order
> of priority?
>
> And, if I end up creating my own mast system, is there any reason that I
> wouldn't be able to mount the gin pole on the mast step itself? There is
> just enough room between my mast and the sides of the mast step to fit an
> open-ended slab of metal on each side. If my slabs were cut with an
> open-ended slot to fit over the mast step bolt (and with an appropriate
> curve on the outside), it seems to me that the gin pole and mast could
> pivot on the same axle. I'm sure someone has considered and perhaps tried
> this before; did it work?
>
> May you each have joy,
>
> Paul L Rhodes
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