FWIW, David, I look at all of the work and expense involved in the
discussions about rebuilding rudders recently and I wonder why owners just
don’t replace the old/broken/ whatever rudder with a new one.

 

That is what I did in January 2011. I got several quotes and talked to a
local boat repairperson who is very good and also a friend about doing the
job. I even got thorough instructions from someone on one of the forums
(Sailnet, SA, I cant recall) who had step by step photos of how he rebuilt a
rudder using his existing stock. The results:

C&C Yachts – had a price of $3600 for a new rudder, but turned out they
didn’t have the drawings or a mould.

Local shop – around $4000

Do it myself – around $1600 and a 2-4 weeks work (Clean up existing stock
and add a new stainless web, laminate Davincell foam to web, shape the foam,
wrap with glass & epoxy, fair, prime, paint)

CCI/Phil’s Foils - $2900CDN for the foil plus $160 to reuse my stock, plus
shipping. Surprisingly a new steel stock and web was $1600, but a carbon
fiber stock & web was only $1300)

Foss Foam - $2450 reusing my old stock. Shipping the old stock to Florida
was about $50, and FedEx ground for the completed and primed rudder was
surprisingly only $125. Foss even made me a new stack of Delrin bearings to
go between the rudder and the hull, and under the retaining nut in the
cockpit.

 

I figured that Foss was by far the best value. And while the rudder was out
I removed the pedestal, rebuilt and refinished it, replaced the idler plate
under the cockpit, and replaced the throttle and shift cables.  All of that
was maintenance I wanted to do before cruising. I’m hoping to have no
problems with the steering for another 36 years.

 

And, actually, I think my new rudder is better than the old one. The stock
on a 38 is made from 2” schedule 80 stainless pipe (2 ½”OD) with a machined
plug welded to the top for the retainer nut. The wen was carbon steel. I
used the stock off a similar vintage LF38 (the former Banana Wind) that was
machined out of a solid 2 ½” OD stainless bar. The rudder is heavier, but I
can’t imagine the grounding that would bend it or the crevice corrosion that
could eat through it.

 

Anyway, based on my experience I’d look into a replacement rudder before I
launched into a rebuild of an old one.

 

 

Rick Brass

Washington, NC

 

 

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Risch
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2013 2:28 PM
To: CNC CNC
Subject: Re: Stus-List 1989 C&C 37+ rudder rebuild

 

Thanks Josh...one of my next projects...

David F. Risch
1981 40-2
(401) 419-4650 (cell)



 

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