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When I used to work for Irwin Yachts we actually
produced several boats where the rudder and the keel did not quite line up. The reason for this was the fitting of the keel which was often done quite sloppily. The hulls had a keel boss upon which the keel was bolted. The area between the keel and the boss was often a bit rough from the mold and not smoothed off properly as there was no way to grind it at exactly straight. Then troweled atop the keel was a mixture of resin, cabosil, etc to bed the keel the boss as the keel studs were drawn up and tightened. These studs were often not exactly straight up from the keel molding process so holes drilled in the keel boss to match them were often much larger than they should have been in order to allow the angled studs to pass through the boss. Then the tightening process was often hit and miss where idiotic mechanics would tighten bolts on one side of the keel all the way and then the other side all the way. There was little consideration for 'cross tightening'. This process often squeezed out the resin mixture more on one side than the other and when the mixture hardened it effectively made the bottom surface of the keel boss crooked. Thus the keel was on there crooked to stay. S.Simon "Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message ... I just ran across a boat on the hard at a local yard and noticed that the rudder doesn't quite line up with the keel. Here's the pic http://www.sailnow.com/gifs/rudder.jpg Does someone know what caused this and how it can be corrected? The boat is about 30 years old at least. |
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