Sorry I did not read the full post before, I would not attempt anymore repairs 
until I spoke with my insurance agent and a surveyor or a qualified boat yard 
with a good rep. from what I have read in the other posts you have received 
some real good advice and for the hull to crack like that there is most likely 
something that is hidden. I am very practiced with fiberglass repair and this 
sound to be a little tough. From all accounts though this does sound as if the 
hauler is solely responsible for the damage and I would be in touch with 
whoever takes their claims. Best of luck
 
Mike M


From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: catalina27-talk: Perplexing keel 
problem after long distance haulingDate: Wed, 1 Aug 2007 22:56:29 -0400

Listees:
 
I have a serious but perplexing problem resulting from the long-distance haul 
of my 1975 C-27. I need your advice.
 
The boat was hauled from North Carolina to Boston in mid-July, essentially a 
return home for the boat and for us. Somewhere along the way the boat was 
damaged. When the boat arrived it was lifted off the flatbed and put in the 
water. It immediately began to take on water--lots of it. After taking it out 
of the water, we discovered a crack at the extreme aft end of the keel at the 
hull (at the point where the hull begins to curve down to shape the narrow end 
of the keel--perhaps an inch or two down that curve). The crack was only 
several inches long around that aft end, perhaps four inches long in all, sort 
of shaped like a "u". The leak showed at the inside at the extreme aft end of 
the bilge in the passage (under the interior deck) between it and the engine 
compartment (boat has an A-4). While the pump kept on top of the leak, it did 
so only barely.
 
A few words about the delivery: The boat had been located on the extreme aft 
end of the trailer. A power boat was placed on the front. The inside of the 
boat was an absolute mess. Things that I had carefully stowed were strewn about 
the boat. Items stowed deep in the after quarter berth were all over the salon 
floor in the forward part of the boat. It was an amazing sight that got worse 
when the water seeped up from the bilge. Clearly the boat had a very rough trip.
 
When the boat was first on stands, I was able to ply out some resin from the 
hull crack and thought maybe I could make a temporary patch to get it across 
Dorchester Bay to my yacht club. I used Marine Tex. The fix looked good, but as 
soon as the hydraulic trailer begin to lift it from the stands and blocks, it 
cracked with a "snap." It had returned. After a short haul on a hydraulic 
trailer to the club, I removed the broken Marine Tex, opened the crack up as 
best I could, and we used West (resin, filler) and some cloth and fashioned a 
repair. When it was sealed on the outside, using a flashlight, I was able to 
locate what seemed to be a crack of sorts in the bilge in that passage leading 
to the engine compartment, where it seemed the water had come in. I poured 
resin into it, hoping it would seep down. 
 
Today, when we lifted the boat off the stands to put it in the water, the same 
thing happened, a snap, and then a 1/8 in wide, several inch long crack 
appeared. This work was done by someone with a great deal of experience using 
West resins.
 
What is going on? The bilge looks fine. Four years ago, I employed the Catalina 
Direct keel bolt upgrade and installed ss lags. I did this only as a precaution 
because the original bolts looked, well, rusted, but no worse than other 
Catalinas. My bilge has always been clean and dry. I see nothing amiss there 
now. There is no Catalina smile on this boat an no other external indications 
of a problem anywhere along the keel.
 
Jon
C-27 1858
 
 
_________________________________________________________________
PC Magazine’s 2007 editors’ choice for best web mail—award-winning Windows Live 
Hotmail.
http://imagine-windowslive.com/hotmail/?locale=en-us&ocid=TXT_TAGHM_migration_HMWL_mini_pcmag_0707

Reply via email to