Rig Check

Ile Jeudi
Bob and Lin Griffiths
Tue 20 Nov 2012 23:39
Tuesday 20 November 2012
 
Danilo and his assistant from the rigging company 'Nordest' arrived about 5 pm and set about preparing lines to haul up to the top of the mast.  They inspected every part of the rigging and sprayed some '3M stuff' on all the terminals (important compression joints) to check for cracks in the rigging set up.  None were found and this was beyond the work we expected to be done.  We got them to concentrate on the stailess steel wires themselves to get an opinion about whether the rusting we experienced last year was 'fatal'.  The wires all passed inspection.  Given that Nordest could have got a full re-rig job paid out of warranty if they had failed the rigging we felt suitably reassured. 
 
They then went on to check the tension of the various stays - too slack and the whole lot comes down (lots of Kg crashing to the deck and many £000's of mast, boom and wires in a heap) - too tight and the hull of the boat can be distorted.  The boats are of made of glassfibre and flex under load and are bent by the rigging tension.  If this is overdone the hull can bend so much that the rig goes slack and comes down.  So both too slack and too tight can have dramatic consequences.  I had been concerned that the tension was too high but was told that it was at the lower end of the acceptable tension range.  Overall, the rigging and the way it was set up and tuned by Demir Marine in Turkey was highly complimented (it must be said that not all the work done by the Turkish marine industry receives accolades).  The happy hours spent up in the rigging with stainless steel cleaner earlier this year in Portimao seem to have paid off.
 
We were so happy with the attitude and professionalism shown by the Nordest people (even before they gave us the answer we wanted to hear about the rigging) that we gave them a couple of other jobs.  What was most pleasing was that they responded promptly to quotation requests and came on the days they said they would (even if the times were variable) and did all work quietly and efficiently - and the prices were good by European standards (helped by there being no VAT in the Canaries).  We were also impressed by Tecklenborg, the wire supplier in Germany.  They stood by their warranty and arranged the rigging check with their Tenerife agent, even though the inspection was outside of the 12 month guarantee period and that there were reasons to believe that the cause of the problem might lie with the way the Turkish company stored the rigging wires and not with Tecklenborg themselves.  This is the way things should be but seldom are in the marine industry.
 
All in all a good result and we were happy to have this crucial matter resolved after all this time.