For anyone rewiring their mast internally, here is what I did which has worked flawlessly for the past 15+ plus years.
I bundled the wires (quite a few of them) using loosely tightened small wire ties. This allowed me to separate the spreader wires so they could be run out to the spreaders.
As I pulled the wires through the mast I made a star configuration of heavy duty wire ties about every three to four feet cutting then ends so they were a little longer than the mast diameter. This keeps the wires away from the sides of the mast. There is no banging as the star holds the wire bundle securely in the approximate center of the mast.
This eliminates foam, insulation and other ineffective means of preventing wire slap.
Sunlight which would degrade the plastic wire ties, make them brittle and cause them to break is not an issue because nothing is exposed to the sun.
The star configuration of the wire ties had had no effect on the ease with which the halyards move within that arrangement.
From my experience, it is a perfect solution.
While I am onto some solutions that have arrived after 42 years ownership of my P36. Here is one that people with leaky windows or leaky handrails may consider.
I have had both problems.
I removed the windows and carefully placed a Butyl tape bead around the perimeter before replacing them. The way I see it, the way I did it, it should be impossible for water to enter the window. The original gasket was properly and adequately intact, so that was not something I wanted to address, although it lingered in the back of my mind.
After doing this somewhat arduous job the first big rainfall arrived and the window over the galley and the one over my chart table leaked as it always had before the Butyl.
I was stumped and confounded to say the lease.
Meanwhile I had 2 beautiful new cabin top handrails in my Pearson collection, thanks to Rudy at D&R about 20 years ago. They were an exact fit and replacement for the original rails that "shrunk" due to wind, rain, sand and sun during the prior 50 years. The deterioration of the originals was undoubtedly hastened by my policy of not covering my boat. (I assume there are strong differences of opinion on this, but I am confident there is less deterioration that way).
While pondering the impossibility of the windows continuing to leak, I decided to distract myself from that anguish by removing the rails in and out and replacing the outer, reusing the inner which remained in like new condition from lack of sun, etc.
I reviewed the numerous replacement methods suggested on this site from a couple years back and decided on an approach which was mentioned by no one, but seemed best to me.
This, simply, consisted of using using a 6 inch ss wood screw [Bolt Depot], carefully lining marking and pre-drilling holes in the upper rail and tightening the outer and innder together from inside. This design eliminates any chance of water entering from a loose or deteriorated teak bung on the upper/outer rail. Actually there is little chance of that being a source of water, but I didn't realize it at the time.
Again, I used Butyl Tape to "perfectly" seal each part of the rail that sits on the cabin top.
Or so I thought.
Next big rainstorm, the windows were leaking; the hand rails were leaking in some areas under the supporting frame.
How could this be! How could this possibly be????
I thought long and hard. Maybe some of you have already solved the problem but I don't recall reading anything that suggests the analysis I finally came to and have tried with success, but I am waiting for a real deluge before I claim victory.
The problem actually had nothing to do with the windows, their bedding, the handrails, or their bedding.
I have a sea hood over my sliding companionway. It was an optional extra when the boat was built.
It turns out to be very easily removable consisting of a machine screw with a finish washer on each corner and two more doubled up on the leading edge of the hood.
I removed the 6 screws and cleaned the screw holes surface on the cabin top. They were dirty. I then took blue painters masking tape and taped each hole replacing the hood held down by ropes tied to the rails and other things that were available.
We've had some pretty decent rain since I did this a week ago and so far no drips.
This is a classic example of a "false positive" problem with a solution that addresses that obvious but false cause of the problem and doesn't work at all.
Just before the idea of the blue tape came to my mind I was all geared up to remove both windows and the inner and outer hand rails, tackling the perceived source of the problem by adding more and more Butyl. Butyl itself can become a big problem as anyone who has worked with it must surely know.
What then actually was the problem.
I'm still not absolutely sure, but I think this must have been it.
There is space between the cabin top and the cabin liner. This space I guess is cored mostly with cut end grain balsa. Guessing how this was done, I imagine it was not, nor intended to be a perfect job.
Water was entering the screw holes where the sea hood was attached. The screw were in place, but loose after all these years. Water was getting in and gravity was assisting it to flow to the edges of the cabin top and from there straight down to the windows and the part of the handrail just below the port and starboard sides of the cabin under the sea hood.
I think this has been the deal all along. Years and years of it. I've given my typical long winded theory. If I am wrong, and I could be, I'll be a little embarrassed to have drawn anyone's attention to this cabin leak problem and wasted their time.
On the other hand, maybe someone else has had the same problem as I and fixed it by waterproofing fastenings on the cabin top and elsewhere that have loosened over time. So this thread applies to all kinds of holes in the boat, not just from a sea hood.
Maybe you will say the solution was obvious from the start. I wish that were true. It wasn't for me.
Let me know please.