[Public-List] Encapsulated iron keel
Peter Hurrey
phurrey at tpg.com.au
Tue Apr 5 13:12:47 PDT 2011
Thanks Rachael, I am considering buying back Rocinante and never realised
the problems there could be with rusting iron. Don't know if that is a
problem she has but something to check out - trouble is it's a liner boat -
540 - so not sure how one would check that out. Cheers
Regards,
Peter Hurrey
Phone 07 54789788
Mobile 0429705067
Email: phurrey at tpg.com.au and phurrey at dodo.com.au
15 Lingard St Palmwoods Queensland 4555
-----Original Message-----
From: public-list-bounces at lists.alberg30.org
[mailto:public-list-bounces at lists.alberg30.org] On Behalf Of Rachel
Sent: Tuesday, 5 April 2011 10:22 AM
To: Alberg 30 Public List -- open to all
Subject: Re: [Public-List] Encapsulated iron keel
On Apr 4, 2011, at 3:59 PM, Peter Hurrey wrote:
> Curious if anyone has had any problems with the iron rusting and expanding
-
> have not heard of that with the Alberg but it was a problem with the
Rawson
> 30, albeit it was iron and concrete. Cheers
I remember reading one (maybe two?) accounts of where someone had had
rusting/expansion of the keel. Obviously that's a small percentage of total
A-30's.
One note is that the keel on some (most? all?) of the A-30s is not
completely encapsulated. That is, a token amount of
resin/cloth-like-substance was laid over the top, but in many (most? all?)
cases it has long ago failed to be a complete encapsulation. In addition,
the after end was shored up with wood and a cementitious material that was
then poured over with pure resin, which of course cracked (probably when it
was fairly new). So there are numerous routes for bilge water/oil/whatever
to get to the iron pig.
On my A-30 (#221) I dug out all of the "false bilge" material at the after
end, plus ground off the failed, thin layer of 'glass on the top of the pig,
then I prepped it all and glassed it in "but good" with epoxy and biaxmat to
encapsulate it. The pig in my boat was clean, non-rusty iron in very good
condition (boat had been in fresh water all its life and clearly lived with
a dry bilge). The "false bilge" material, on the other hand, was gas/oil
soaked and nasty, making the boat smell yucky and causing it to be
impossible to get it clean and sweet smelling (until I removed it). Once it
was removed and re-glassed, I gained a cleanable bilge and a small sump for
the bilge pump, so it was a win-win for me.
The pig itself is set into a "bed" of the same cementitious material as was
used to partially fill the "false" bilge.
Of course I can't speak for all A-30's, but that's how mine was, and I have
read a number of other accounts that were similar (plus seen a few on other
A-30's I looked at). I've only looked at the "stick built interior"
versions, but if I remember correctly, Don, who rebuilt his "liner" version
(but without a liner) might have had a similar bilge. Don't quote me on
that last though (we did compare notes so I could go back and look if
necessary).
Rachel
ex-#221
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