100.
Besides our deck setup, this shows the new mast inspection cover for the wiring. All wiring joints are inside that cover and made with proper plugs, not butt connectors like the dealer installed.
If you want your own, go to rigrite.com. Under Kenyon spars, just pick one. Then scroll to the bottom of the page. You'll see the electrical inspection cover. It's part number RR 72-99. The ordering instructions are on their site.
In this view the empty rollers on the deck are for the yet to be reeved single line reefing. You know, I didn't talk about the painting of the mast. Here is the text I posted on-line today, 2/26/05.
For prep work I ground out all of the corrosion prior to metal-prep. Then I filled the corrosion with MarineTex. Then block sanded to a level surface. Just like painting a car. Primer and sand. I used U.S. paint epoxy primer. It goes on thick with lots of brush marks. No problem. Wet sand it with a hand block, 220 grit or so. Yes, wet. You won't get six inches to a sheet of paper if you don't. (I tried) Let's see, I used the spray etching primer from ??? I don't remember. It's yellow and goes over the bare aluminum spots that the epoxy primer/filler is not suited for. It is very thin when dry. When I was a Navy Yard painter in the '60s, we called it 117 primer. OK, all of your flaws are gone by this time. Mix up your paint. I used Awlgrip linear polyurethane. It's two part. Mix up a bunch and apply with a roller. Be ready to mix more right away when you run out so that no lap marks have time to form. I mixed a pint or so at a time. I found very dense foam rollers at Home Depot. They are made of thick sponge like material and really hold a lot of paint. They are also small diameter. Load up and paint. Look over your shoulder at the paint you just applied. When you see the paint bubbling, go back and tip. Use the same roller but with no extra paint. (damp) Caution! On a sunny day the shine will hurt your eyes. I used white of course but it's your call. I did the spinnaker pole too. The black end caps are appliance black epoxy spray-can paint also from Home Depot. The job took about a week. All paint should be applied when the temperature reaches 70 degrees or so. And make sure the last of it goes on no later than noonish. Two coats will do it. One per day per side. If evening condensation occurs it will dull the finish if you painted late in the day. The last thing to do is to insure all of your stainless parts do not touch aluminum after the rig is reassembled.