Fresh water is a sealed mast after winter storage

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Vladimir Eremeev

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Apr 25, 2026, 4:36:56 PMApr 25
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Hi, everyone. I am a new member and I’m planning to bring my Nacra F17 on Tuesday.
Today I was unpacking the boat after winter storage and I found water splashing inside of my mast. The mast was stored with a top sitting lower than the mast base on a trailer.
I have a draining plug at the base so I was able to drain about a glass of fresh water.
After a panic attack I went soaking the mast in a creek and I didn’t find any leaks.
So, could it be a condensate?
Or it is a rain water/snow made its way through mast step/lower hardware connections?
Anyone had the similar experience? Tell me it’s sort of ok before I started blowing air into the mast and look for leaks :)
Thanks.
See you on Tuesday..
Vladimir

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john baker

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Apr 26, 2026, 3:21:45 PMApr 26
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Hi Vladimir,
I'm not sure if the water you found in your mast is from precipitation or condensation. How is your relationship with your neighbors? A while back, I caught one of my neighbors putting water in my mast late one night. I think it is a good idea to check your mast for leaks every so often.
What time are you going to bring your boat on Tuesday? I can meet you. Sometimes it is helpful to have a second pair of hands.
Talk later,
John Baker
301 385 0701
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Jahn Tihansky

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Apr 26, 2026, 4:10:43 PMApr 26
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Vlad,

Just be careful with the pressure you use.  I'd recommend using a shopvac in blow mode which shouldn't damage the mast like a compressor might.

Jahn



Jahn Shaffer Tihansky
Professional Mariner, Sailing Coach & Adventurer


Sam Carter

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Apr 26, 2026, 6:57:17 PMApr 26
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Vlad,

  It’s definitely not condensate. I had the same thing happen after a season of sailing on a pretty new mast. Found out while rigging for an event that required weigh-in. I suspect the top cap was leaking. That is probably the case with your mast, unless something else is obvious (pooling water). You can’t really blow air into these rigs-there is a plug at both the top and the bottom, so you would need to drill a hole. I think a few psi is OK, but JT’s approach is perhaps safer.

Main leak points:
1) Spinnaker bail. The metal ones are notorious for this. Replace with a dyneema bail.
2) top plug (under the carbon hound cap)
3) Hound fitting-unlikely but the sealant can fail.

Best,
Sam
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