I am not an engineer, just a plain and simple tax accountant, what you in the US call a CPA, but I will try and explain the issues. If others (Matt Bounds, Adrio, Jeremy at Surf City, Matt Miller etc) can help with better phrases or explanations, please chime in.
As we sheet in hard on the main, the centre of effort moves a little aft, which places more pressure on the forestay. In turn, the forestay (via the bridle wires,) pulls 'up and inwards' on the tips of the bows. This is nothing new. The only place the hulls can 'flex' is right at the front cross bar. Any movement from this motion on the rest of the hulls is more or less fixed due to the geometry of the location of the crossbars.
The same thing happens when we are sailing, and we get hit with a puff. Part of that force is applied to heeling, and part to greater speed. In other words, part will 'push' the mainsail over more, putting more strain on the standing rigging. The shrouds transfer the force to more heeling and more speed, (unless we sheet out to relieve this pressure,) but any excess will transfer to the forestay, and hence, to the tips of the hulls, causing more of the same flexing. I won't even mention wave action here.
Beginning in 1984, as I understand it, in order to make the H18 lighter, Hobie moved to a foam sandwich construction. Another aspect of the drive to save weight was the decrease in the size of the tabs. As you know, at initial construction, the fibreglass tab applied inside the hulls at the cross bar between each side of the hull and deck was only (?) 8" wide, (in a fore-and-aft orientation,) and really needs to be about (?) 15" wide. (Someone help me with dimensions here, please.) This tab acts as a reinforcement, and helps prevent the hulls from flexing too much as described above. And over-flexing, as we know, can cause interesting structural failures.
If you have buddies with newer H18's, take a flashlight and look inside the porthole, around the front cross bar. Check out the width of the tab, compared to yours. Does this do it for you?
_________________ 2015 H16, with spin, SOLD 1989 Hobie SX18 Sail # 1947 "In Theory..." 'Only two things are infinite, the universe, and human stupidity. But I'm not sure about the former.'
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