[Public-list] Wooden rudders on old Albergs
Don Campbell
dk.campbell at sympatico.ca
Fri Dec 15 21:00:41 PST 2006
Hi Hugh;
I did not post to the public list. I usually mention too many brand
names to keep George happy, so avoid that if we still want a chat line.
I would suggest you contact Gougeon's in Michigan. They have a 1-800
number for their technical help line available from any of their
publications and I don't think it fair commerce to give that number out
without you buying their $3.00 booklet on how to repair fiberglass
boats. If you cannot find it on the rock, check out their website at
www.westsystem.com I think it is.
I wonder about doing the whole thing before you leave and doing a
really fine job of glassing in the wood. If you do call the tech line,
you will be talking to one of their shop guys who works with both epoxy
and problems on a day to day basis. He will have made many wooden
rudders too. I found their advice priceless when I redid the whole of
the deck on #528. I used their epoxy too.
I have made a rudder for our 18 foot dinghy and the core was cedar.
The whole thing was epoxied once I had the camber and chord as I wanted
it. That was a very interesting job as the rudder was tapered from top
to bottom , from fore to aft and had a max depth of 1 1/8 " 40% of the
depth from the front, tapered as the rudder was designed. Once I had
finished the shaping, the whole thing was epoxy encased and the holes
drilled for the cheek plates. I don't see why you could not pull your
rudder together in place with clamps and gorilla glue, and then epoxy
some gussets over the join to hold it so you can take off the clamps and
feel comfortable that the join will not open up again, then encapsulate
the whole thing. That should only take a day or day and a half to do and
a couple of days to cure well enough to get you on your way. You could
even add the barrier coat as it is fairly fast drying too.
You really do not want to be stymied for lack of steerage,
particularly in the upper St Lawrence or locks. Having any splint on the
outside will be prone to being hit, slowing the boat and always runs the
risk of being torn off, or if through bolted, weakening the wood more
than you would like. Usually the best and cheapest fix is the correct
fix the first time.
Where is your boat? If you need help, that can be arranged if it is
close enough.
I do hope you have seen her and are not relying only on just a
survey, as there are usually several other things that need to be done
before you go anywhere near the ocean with an Alberg 30. The short list
is to resize the bolts on the 7 chainplates to at least 5/16" and that
means fixing the knees too if they are waterlogged. Replace all rivets
on the boom with 1/4" machine bolts tapped into the endcaps. Check for
weak decks and cockpit floor. Masonite in the early boats was much
better than balsa in the later hulls for staying dry. Stuffing box
packing is probably dried out. Gate valves are not safe for fresh water,
never mind the ocean, on all through hull fittings. Hull to deck joints
can be a problem in older hulls. Check the lamination of the covering
layer on the ballast in the forward cabin and redo that joint for the
length of the keel, both sides. It was not ever well done in production
and has given way on most hulls. That means taking out most of the
interior- easier on non-liner older boats. This bad joint allows too
much flex of the hull to begin with, and allows salt water to get to the
iron ballast and rust it, which expands the iron and pops the hull to
hull joint. Mast beam is another point, if it is oak. Rigging will also
be original for my bet and the threads on the turnbuckles will not take
a blow if you get the normal between Labrador and the island. Cracked
tiller head is another common fault. It will be worn for sure so the
tiller will be loose. I am also very leery of the quality of sails you
will have, as most Alberg sailors have had a propensity to use sails
well after they become rags. This tends to promote heeling before
forward motion and really does drag performance out to the lowest limit
possible. Instruments, Well they all need to be replaced unless there
have been recent updates.
I have a son who does ocean deliveries and he has sailed from St.
Maarten to Halifax with a boat, - sight unseen by the owner- but a
survey saying there were good sails aboard. They had recommission that
hull for 3 weeks after the date they had wanted to leave, to re-stitch
the rags before they left, blew one set out with weak cloth within 2
days and limped into Bermuda to resew things again. The owner still did
not believe that the sails were done when they arrived in Halifax. I
will not mention his name but he could afford better because he sold a
brewery.
As for trucking, I thought there were a fair number of boat builders
in the mainland maritime provinces and that they have a boat builders
co-op at least for selling. You need to hook up there for a back haul if
you want to get her part way home at least by road.
I find all the trucking costs suggested to be out of line, unless
you had that delivery right to St. John's. I know it is 24 hours from
the ferry to the east coast with a rig, and from Toronto to Picteau is
less than that. I took my trailer from here to NY NY and back for $1500,
three years ago and that was one day down and another back with a
tractor and driver, about a 26 hour drive with border and all. It does
depend a bit on how they treat log books though and what happens in
Quebec. They are a law unto themselves when it comes to trucking through
that province. For the local stuff, they are taking advantage of you not
being there. However, you may not be getting the local person to do the
move. I know at Port Dover there are 5 truckers who move boats, so price
is very negotiable. I also know they like the owner to say if things are
good to go too.
Any help I can be, don't hesitate to ask. If you are up on the
Avalon Penn. I have one of my trucks up there trucking crab from wharf
to the plant, at least that was what I sold her for about 10 years ago
now. I can look that chap up, I'm sure. I don't know if he has tractors
as the one I sold him was a tandem Mack.
There was one chap in Hamilton who bought a fixer in Annapolis. Both
Mike Lehman and I tried to talk him into trucking the boat home as the
safest ordeal possible and it took him about 18 months to do that and
thank goodness he did. He is alive still to talk about it and has the
boat at home to work on now. Finding an opportune ride is often the best
and cheapest way of going, even if it is shipped deck cargo on a
freighter from Toronto, Hamilton or Port Weller.
Don
Hugh McCormack wrote:
1166245241.0
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