Here’s a tip from one who jacks up ceilings/roofs to replace walls. Place a 
piece of foam rubber under the jack and on top of the 2x4 at the ceiling. It’ll 
greatly reduce the chance of slippage.

Mark, Gratis (6115)

NOLA

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, May 19, 2010 8:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [IC27A] Bulkhead replacement

 

  

I did this job about 10 years ago on my 1986 C27. I spoke to Catalina how to 
remove the bulkhead and followed their directions even though it sounded crazy, 
and dangerous.

 

The mast must be down. 

Remove everything that attaches to both sides of the bulkhead. Table, shroud 
plates, medicine cabinet; everything. Then comes the scary part. Using a 2X4 
placed on top of a small hydraulic jack, placed near the compression post, 
slowly jack up the cabin top, I placed a  small piece of wood under the jack to 
spread out the load on he floor. When jacking, be very careful because the 2X4 
or the jack can slip very easily and it fly's out with a lot of force. Trust 
me, it happened a couple of times until I got it positioned just right. While 
jacking, the boat creeks and groans something fierce. Keep jacking until the 
fiberglass around the compression post is just high enough to tilt the top of 
the compression post out. Once the post is out, you can then slide the entire 
bulkhead out. Again, use a lot of care not to jar the 2X4 while removing the 
bulkhead. Once the bulkhead is out, you can let the jack down until the new 
bulkhead  is ready to be put back in place. 

I took a piece of marine grade teak plywood and the old bulkhead to the cabinet 
maker that made my kitchen cabinets. He was able to cut the new bulkhead using 
the old one as a template. He also was able to match and apply the laminate to 
the head side of the bulkhead. He matched it perfectly. He told me that the 
bulkhead has seven different compound miter cuts. That alone made it worthwhile 
having him fabricate it. Very minor sanding made it fit perfectly. You just 
jack up the cabin top and install everything in reverse. By the way, I used 
Cetol on the cabin side of the bulkhead and it matched almost perfectly to the 
rest of the factory stained wood. Also, it's a good time to run any new wires 
you need up the compression post and out the top.

 

I know this whole thing sounds crazy, but trust me, it just took a lot of guts, 
planning and care. I gave you the real quick explanation, let me know if you 
need any more detail. 

 

 

John Wamboldt

C27 #6287

ZuZu's Petals

Lake Michigan

 

 

 

In a message dated 5/19/2010 4:10:04 P.M. Central Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes:

  

I've search archives for information related to replacing the starboard 
bulkhead on a mid eighties catalina 27. 
I have an 87' that needs a new bulkhead. 
Has anyone documented their effort to replace a late model 27's starboard 
bulkhead? 
I don't want to quess and start removing parts randomly. 
It appears that a least a portion of the compression post might have to be 
removed in order to slide the bulkhead out. 
The post looks to be four pieces of solid wood lamenated together. There are 
four bungs visible on the side of the post next to the drop down table. 
I'm assuming these hide the screws that anchor the bulkhead to the post. 
Can the post be removed to allow access to the bulkhead? Looking for some help!

Steve



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