
This is an open boat with the mast stowed, so why isn't the mast stowed high on this? or in other cases, later boats with canopies still had low masts when they were folded. And you still haven't answered my question about the blue highlighted areas.
cos they had to get it under the bridge, andrew.........obvious, and simples,
Nah, nah nah!!!!...you are changing the goalposts on this discussion, because you flatly refuse to beieve that someone else couldn't be right.
I can understand Kiwi's explanation of it being an engine hoist, because he freely admits that he knows very little about british lifeboats......
but that is where your argument falls flat on the floor.
You work (albeit voluntarily) at Chatham Lifeboat collection and therefore for you to latch on to his theory of it being a lifeboat engine hoist kept on a lifeboat is pure fantacy and quite rediculous.
How many lifeboat plans have you seen with this type of equipment drawn on the actual boat plans........................I doubt any at all.............
and don't forget these plans are for the SPECIFIC BOAT with ON number that I am building so generic engine hoist drawings would not be put on a set of plans.
This boat was also the first Motor lifeboat to be built specifically for and stationed in Ireland, and lifeboat designs change as they progress, so how you can say catagorically that those two uprights are not for that specific boat at that specific station to hoist a mast on a boat that is kept afloat are incorrect when it shows them on the plan is (as they say in Ireland) Pure Baloney.
You have not yet come up with any reasonable argument of your ownas to what the ctrutch is other than an engine hoist or other than latch onto someone else's theories, and until you can come up with an argument to prove not only myself but also Quinton Nelson whose decendants served as coxs'ns on that specific boat, you won't sway my mind one bit.
As for showing me a picture of a small lifeboat going under a bridge with a mast on a crutch....do you wonder why I took the preverbial in my opening sentence.........I could show you a dozen pictures of masts on single post crutches.........but that doesn't prove that this boat didn't have as what I have constructed.
As for answering your questions about the blue lines on the plans..........I think I did earlier but you weren't listening. the foreward blue line corresponds to the fore mizzen bipod ( there are clear points on the drawing of brackets both port and starboard to slot the curved bipod into which you failed to mention when trying to prove that it was a single post crutch when the drawing shows clearly a bipod, and the aft blue line comes out of the gearbox top casing (made of timber and so wouldn't be that strong to hold a veryy hefty main mast and rigging, on the starboard side of the boat. Whilst the Mizzen mast tabernacle is offset to port to allow the mast to fall to port, the main mast tabernacle is square set to allow the main mast to fall centrally down the boat and would therefore miss that aft "blue" upright as it is offset to starboard by about a foot.
We shall have to wait until friday when I can contact Simon at the NMM for a definative answer to the conundrum.........and that is all I shall say on the matter...........too many theories and supersitions are baffling my brain and giving me a headache of all headaches.
neil.