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On Jun 11, 6:50 am, RichH wrote:
The additional problem with 'bolt on' keels is the concentration of stress at the root of the keel and the mating structure. The Bavaria line is the most stunning example of this stress anomaly wherin new boats are losing their keels ... not as a failure of the keel nor its attachment bolting but rather the mating FRG structure. ... You're onto something here. I saw a Bavaria in the Bay of Islands that had gone aground and split the hull right aft of the keel right along the line where they remove the core to "reinforce" hull at the keel joint. It also looks like the J in the link Jeff posted had a similar split but at the front of the keel right where the core is replaced. I can't really see it well in the photos, but it looks like the panel sandwich had a peel failure, too. Also, with the J the keel ripped the hull open right along the reinforcement line (the bolts didn't fail, the panel failed). So, yes, I think you're right on the money with the stress riser issue. Just to be pedantic, the problem would be the same even if they glassed over the metal part of the keel. So, I think of these kinds of failures are hull panel failures rather than keel joint failures and don't see them as a problem with bolt on keels per se. But I'm willing to concede the point. -- Tom. |
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