Ger,
I am confused by the response you mention in the Dutch Case. I'm wondering if the 25% mentioned might be a typo.
Seldan clearly state in their on-line material and the manual I received with the boat that stay tension should be 15 - 20 % of breaking strain of the stainless steel wire used. Loos, the manufacturer of the rigging gauges warn that tensioning past 25% will cause damage. The optimal tension in rigging should be the optimal stress for the wire and should be independent of the boat design. The manufacturers of the rigging should select a size of wire appropriate with the expected loads from the design.
I know of one sailor who replaced his side stays with a higher breaking strain wire in the belief that this would be stronger. It was not, it merely transferred the forces to the mast and deck.
My understanding is that changes in stress in highly stressed metal over a period of time will result in metal fatigue. Under-stressing is also a problem as it may cause shock loadings when a stay may go slack..
"Pumping" of a rig generally refers to the forward/aft motion of the mast, particularly when sailing downwind and caused by a slack aft stay, not the side stays. Many designs of boats, particularly fractionally rigged boats ( not Bavarias in my experience) have running back stays to control mast bend. Some have "Check Stays" designed to stop the pumping action. Having been on boats experiencing the "Pumping" when the check stay was not tensioned, I can testify as to the forces. The whole boat was vibrating. Not having the check stay tensioned properly can lead to the mast inverting ( bowing forward) and breaking. My 2009 Bav 38 is 7/8 fractionally rigged. It is almost a cross between the fully fractionally rigged boats, typically 3/4 or possibly even less and a masthead rigged boat.
With 15% tension in the side stays, as the force of the wind increases, the tension in the lee stay decreases as load transfers to the windward stay. The maximum sideways force that may be applied by the wind should be designed to be less than 20% of the breaking strain of the stays, after taking into account the vectors. Your boat will heal over so that a force of this magnitude should never be applied to the mast. With this force, the windward stay tension would increase to about 25% of the breaking strain and the leeward stay would reduce to about 5%.
Fibreglass along with steel and wood flex under load but fibreglass, being mainly a plastic will not completely return to its original position when load is removed. Bavaria have minimised this by connecting the rig to the Grid and not the hull. Rig tension should be checked yearly to counter this "bending".
The greater the rigging forces, the more the boat will be deformed.
Given that "Pumping" generally refers to backstay tension, I think that the problems with the mast base ( tabernacle) is likely to be from insufficient back-stay tension, not side stay tension.
Craig
"Shirley Valentine"
Gold Coast
AUSTRALIA