[Public-list] HELP! Bulkhead Problem

Peter Staehling staehpj1 at yahoo.com
Tue May 30 04:05:54 PDT 2006


Hi Mike,

That means dropping the mast which probably means
hauling the boat, right?  Since I have an "iffy"
shoulder and only my wife to assist, that probly means
having to pay the marina to drop the mast and also
losing the best part of the Summer.

How much would you want for the plywood?

The rot behind the chainplate is a very limited area
(about 2"x7").  I ground it out to solid wood and I am
probably going to repair it at least for the short
term.  I think that the chain plate can pretty easily
be as strong as original or better after filling the
hole and adding doublers (ply, plate or glass).

I am a little more concerned about the fact that there
are two other areas with rot, but think they could
probably stand the same treatment.  On the plus
side... The areas of rot seem to have clearly defined
edges and they are narrow areas with the rest of the
bulkhead seeming as solid as new.  Except for one
plate in the v-berth, the repairs would also be in
areas that only show only inside the locker, so
cosmetically it isn't much of an issue.

I really don't want to go to the expense or have the
boat out of the water for the repair right now.  I
think that after some patching, it should be able to
wait until the next time it is on the hard.  Am I
kidding myself?

Pete

--- Mike Lehman <sail_505 at hotmail.com> wrote:

> Pete,
> 
> You need to replace that bulkhead. Call me....we
> have some 3/4"' teak 
> plywood that is perfect for the job. Harry Gamber
> #484 had a similar 
> incident a few weeks ago and her is all fixed and
> back on the race course.
> 
> 
> 
> Mike Lehman
> ~~~_/)_/)~~_/)~~~
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ----Original Message Follows----
> From: Peter Staehling <staehpj1 at yahoo.com>
> Reply-To: Alberg 30 Public List -- open to all
> <public-list at alberg30.org>
> To: Alberg 30 Public List -- open to all
> <public-list at alberg30.org>
> Subject: [Public-list] HELP! Bulkhead Problem
> Date: Sun, 28 May 2006 07:56:07 -0700 (PDT)
> 
> We had a near dismasting yesterday.  The chain plate
> for the starboard upper pulled most of the way out
> while close hauled.  We quickly rounded up rolled up
> the jib and dropped the main.
> 
> We hooked the main halyard to the car on the
> starboard
> chain plate to hold the mast up.
> 
> Today upon inspection I find that starboard foreward
> bulkhead has been rotted away where the chain plate
> attaches.
> 
> There is still a little solid plywood next to it on
> the side by the hull, So I am hoping that I can
> dig/grind out all the rot and fill the void with a
> piece of wood and some epoxy and microballons or
> some
> other filler.
> 
> I hope that if I do that and add doublers on both
> sides  (aluminum plate? plywood?) it will be strong
> enough.
> 
> There is also other rot.
> 
> Between the upper and lower shelf in the closet it
> is
> soft against the curve of the hull may be 1-2" wide
> of
> an area.
> 
> The area where the lower shelf contacts is all soft
> as
> well.
> 
> It looks like some of this has been rotton for a
> long
> time.  Some of it had been filled with expandable
> foam.  It looks like a old "repair".
> 
> The curve where the lower part of the bulkhead meets
> the curve of the bottom is suspect because I see
> foam
> there too, but it sounds solid when I tap it.
> 
> I wonder if I can get it fixed well enough to keep
> sailing at least for the season by removing the soft
> areas and reinforcing them or if more drastic
> measures
> are required.
> 
> I can imagine dropping the mast and taking out the
> bulkhead, but really hope I don't have to do that
> now!
> 
> I am suprised that it held at all, but we have had
> the
> rail in the water before without incident.
> 
> Please advise.  I will provide more info and maybe
> pictures if needed.
> 
> Pete
> #554


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