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kevinkan
Joined: 07 Jun 2001 Posts: 1661 Location: San Francisco
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Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2017 1:23 pm Post subject: |
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zirtaeb wrote: | Those old Fibs from the '90s do really well, until the arm at the front end snaps from the joint between the arm and the head. Wrap glass around, about 3 layer's, can make them last seemingly foreever.
The wide bend is nice on freeride and slalom sails.
You can extend the life of the adjusters by layering two layers of electrical tape on the notch's, making them hold without slipping.
Always extend and retract the arms slowly.
Was sailing Sat. on a 1995 WH tapered boom, a 1997 North Convert 5.2, and a '04 JP FSW 84, all parts working as well as anything could work. |
You're still sailing that JP FSW 84? For some reason, I think the board you have is a 2005? Or is this a different one?
The Windsurfing Hawaii Power Taper was my first boom I ever bought... but followed quickly by a Fiberspar Post-Grip 150. Will Harper had let me borrow his while I waited for my Power Taper to come in. I didn't think his $550 boom was that big of a deal until my Power Taper arrived. _________________ Kevin Kan
Sunset Sailboards, San Francisco CA
http://www.sunsetsailboards.com
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dllee
Joined: 03 Jul 2009 Posts: 5329 Location: East Bay
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Posted: Sat Jul 01, 2017 1:33 pm Post subject: |
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Hey Kev...
Yeah, that 84FSW is the board I'd ride every day if I could use a sail from 5.8 down to 4.5. It' the earliest planing, fastest FSW ever. I do rotate it with a '10 Tabou 3S, a '04 RoqueWave FSW, a 85 liter JPProSlalom, and a Drops 2stroke 80, which keeps the JP alive and doing well. |
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jimbeall
Joined: 01 Aug 2001 Posts: 30
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Posted: Fri Aug 04, 2017 2:13 pm Post subject: Who makes the best boom? |
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Do the Chinook Pro 1 Alloy Booms corrode ??? What do you think they corrosion life is? Say after 5 years are they 20% weaker? I would love to hear your opinion.
Perhaps much discussed else where. Carbon vs Alloy. What is really more durable? Carbon is very good until cracked.
email to Chinook:
Comment: Pro 1 Alloy Booms. I have 3 of them so as to rig without changing harness line with different sizes. The old booms would break at the head where the bolts went threw. As was known in salt water they corroded over time. I been windsurfing 31 years and broke several of the older Chinook Aluminium booms. I weigh 230 lbs so things break. I live in Maui.Two of my Pro 1 Alloy Booms are a few years old. I have always had the Chinook booms.Faithful customer.
Here is the question. Do the Pro 1 Alloy Booms corrode Much? Do they have a corrosion life with salt water ?
So second question carbon booms . Does carbon weaken over time similar to metal fatigue ?
from Chinook:
Hi James,
The Chinook Pro 1 Booms and all our Alloy booms are hard anodized to prevent/slowdown corrosion. That being said you should rinse your boom if you’re going to store it for any length of time and take out the tailpiece. This will help extend the life of the boom.
Carbon on the other hand will not corrode. It would however been good to rinse it as well since it does have some metal parts in the head.
Saltwater is hard on any equipment as I’m sure you know all too well.
Carbon will way outlast alloy in a saltwater environment |
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