At the weekend I went up the mast, all the way to the top, twice (my quads and shoulders are telling me all about it today!).
The old aerial bracket will fit the new aerial, so that is the good news, the bad news is that the splice on the spare halyard means I can't get quite to the top without standing with locked knees in the stirrups, making it quite hard to work, and any work on the aerial is done at full extension.
To try and get the nut off the bottom of the aerial, I gripped the top section with my mulgrips. As the plastic split (I gripped a bit too high up the aerial to start with) water poured out of the body, showing water had managed to enter the aerial body itself - it had probably then travelled all the way down the coax, destroying it as it did. I, rather stupidly, didn't tie the mulgrips on to bosuns chair, they slipped and fell straight into the water (thankfully not the deck! (or onto any hapless passer by...)), however, with no mulgrips, with the spanner on the nut, the aerial just span no matter how hard I tried to grip the top section with my pliers. I did consider drilling out the bracket and replacing that too, however I had forgotten my Duralac also, so I didn't want to start that process. Drilling fully extended didn't feel desperately sensible at any rate...
I am left ordering new mulgrips, and going back to have another try in a few weekends time when my quads have recovered. What is my best option? I'm surprised that nut has galled so badly onto the body of the aerial/the bottom of the bracket (Alley onto Stainless I suppose?)
- Use some Plusgas, spanner and mulgrips should get it undone do we think? Or am I wasting time there?
- A nut splitter just won't work as too much force will be required. What about a Dremel with a cutting disc? Sounds more dicey than just drilling off the bracket?
- Do I get on with it and just drill out and replace the bracket and stop messing around? Installing monel rivets at height using my long, levered, riveters, is not for the faint hearted.
Either way, I'm going to try and pull a bit of that splice into the mast (without getting it wedged), to try and get a bit higher up... come to think of it, I could always cut the splice off and replace it with a Bowline?? The primary use for this halyard will be going aloft anyway?