Hi All,

So I checked the various posts and photos available, and chatted with one
lister, but I have yet to see a really clear description of outright
failure of the mast step area, other than repeat references to the 33ii
collapsing mast step syndrome, and the assertion that the construction is
inadequate.  So, I took my (unfailed) boat apart, 'cuz, well, that's what I
do...

The mast sits in a rectangular cast-alloy base, that is longer and wider
than the mast itself.  This allows mostly for shimming fore and aft to
adjust mast rake.
The alloy base sits on the 'glass liner, which sits on a piece of
3/4"plywood, which sits on a pile of putty,(bog) which sits on a built up
section of glass where one of the keel bolts penetrates and on a fabricated
fiberglass cross-member spans the bilge, athwartships. This cross-member
(aka "floor timber") is a hollow fiberglass beam which is semi-elliptical
in section.  (like an inverted trough.)  It is part of the "spider" or
whatever they called it, which stiffens the hull.

The mast is still stepped, so I can't yet go further, but for now I can see
three areas of potential failure:

1: The wood can deteriorate allowing the mast to settle by its thickness,
2: the putty could fracture crumble, move, fail, - ditto,
3: worst of all, the cross-member could conceivably collapse, allowing the
mast to settle by some portion of its height.  This would not be good....

If my mast step has settled, it's not by much.   To me, the wood and putty
part is kind of cheesy,  and I'll re-do that anyway because it bugs me and
I think wood in a wet place is bad news.   The crossmember looks really
strong, and while I have this apart I could get clever and reinforce it,
but it may be totally unnecessary.

Has anyone actually observed the mode of this particular failure?  Can
anyone confirm that this crossmember has been a failure point in normal use
and has contributed to this purported flaw in the boat?

Thanks!  Dave

BTW, I will document and post this work for the benefit of future
generations.
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