[alberg30] alberg 25 ???
RABBIT649 at aol.com
RABBIT649 at aol.com
Tue Aug 17 14:53:15 PDT 1999
From: RABBIT649 at aol.com
Dear Tom,
My understanding is that all Pearsons were done with lead. The 35, having
been built by Pearson, would therefore be lead. This is a deduction, not a
fact, but one I've seen corroborated in other descriptions of the 35.
I personally know of no problems with the iron. Theoreticians, such as
myself, can be needless alarmists. Although iron oxide expands to many times
the volume of iron and could theoretically explolde out of its encapsulation
and although the Alberg ballast was bedded in about a half inch layer of a
porous cementicious material which looks like Thoroseal or watertight cement
(a fact I verified on Ashwagh when the 18" piece of 2 x 4 at the rear of the
ballast crumbled and had to be removed and resealed), I know of no case where
this has actually happened.
I would love to hear more input on this issue, experiential, anecdotal or
theoretical.
In a message dated 8/17/99 8:48:05 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
tomsu at uky.campuscw.net writes:
> From: Tom Sutherland <tomsu at uky.campuscw.net>
>
> Paul,
>
> I have deduced from something you wrote that the ballast in the Alberg
35's
> was
> lead. Is this correct ?
> Also, can anyone shed a bit of light on the idea by some that the cast iron
> ballast is something to be avoided. It has come up on other sailing lists
to
> which I subscribe and I felt unqualified to address it. Can any of the old-
> timers
> ( in experience ) relate any particular problems with the A30 cast iron
> ballasts
> ?
>
> Tom S
> A30 #412
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