I sealed the edges of the plywood with epoxy. Here's a link to some  
pictures once the bulkhead was removed. There is a shot of the jack 
positioning.  
Sorry for the poor quality of the pictures. 
Steve, let me know if you can't see the pictures very well, I'll e-mail  
them to you directly.
 
_http://groups.yahoo.com/group/IC27A/photos/album/1620399805/pic/1050042825/
view?picmode=&mode=tn&order=ordinal&start=1&count=20&dir=asc_ 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/IC27A/photos/album/1620399805/pic/1050042825/view?picmode=&;
mode=tn&order=ordinal&start=1&count=20&dir=asc) 
 
 
 
John Wamboldt 
C27 #6287
ZuZu's Petals
Lake Michigan
 
 
 
In a message dated 5/20/2010 8:42:15 A.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
 
 
Many thanks for the information. I'll try to document this task with a  
camera, it may prove helpful to someone else in the future. 
Won't be able  to attempt this fix for a few weeks but will definetly 
repost when I tackle  it.
I was surprised when the tech told me that the interior was installed  
after the mating of the deck to the hull. I assumed the interior was  
fabricated 
and installed prior to the deck being mated. 
Didn't think there  was any way to get that out without destroying it in 
the process. 
2 to 3"  sounds like a lot. Did the deck experience any damage from the 
jacking? Did  you seal the edges of the new panel before installing  it?

Steve

--- In [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) ,  
jwambo8...@... wrote:
>
> I remember being surprised when I  received a call back from Catalina. 
The 
> day before I left a message  stating that I was looking for information 
on 
> how to remove the  bulkhead. I was told that someone would call me back. 
The 
> very next  day I received a phone call from Gerry Douglas, vice president 
and 
>  head engineer of Catalina. He was very nice and answered every question 
I  
> had.
> 
> You have to raise the ceiling more than you  would think. If I remember 
> right it was around 2-3 inches. The  compression post needs to clear the 
> recesses on the ceiling. Once it  was clear, I tilted the top of the post 
out and 
> lifted the bottom  out. Neither the compression post nor the bulkhead was 
> fastened to  anything else or each other. Everything just fit tightly 
> together.  
> When removing the compression post, the small panel next to the head  
door 
> also just slips in and out. Sort of like fitting a puzzle  together. You 
just 
> sort of have to figure the best way as you go  along.
> At the time, the only teak plywood that I could get was  imported from 
> Greece and was metric. It seemed bigger that 1/2 inch  but smaller than 
3/4.
> 
> Looking back, I'm still am amazed at  the procedure and how much the boat 
> actually flexed. I can't  emphasize enough about the care you must take 
around 
> the jack and the  2X4's. While under that much pressure, resting on a 
> curved floor,  propped on a slippery top, when they slipped, they flew. 
Be 
> careful  and take your time. The foam rubber in between sounds like a 
good  idea.
> 
> Good Luck.
> 
> John Wamboldt 
> C27  #6287
> ZuZu's Petals
> Lake Michigan
> 
> 
>  
> In a message dated 5/19/2010 9:11:54 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
> scant...@... writes:
> 
> 
> 
> 
>  John,
> 
> Funny, I talked to Catalina today and the tech I spoke  to didn't have a 
> clue. His suggestion was to pose the question on  this forum. 
> How much room did it require to slip the compression post  out. Are we 
> talking an inch, 1/2" or less. It's hard to tell how much  the recess is 
in the 
> top and bottom pockets. 
> Did you lift up  and out or simply pull it out once the cabin ceiling was 
>  clear?
> I mentioned the bungs on the table side of the compression  post. Are 
there 
> screws anchoring the bulkhead inside the channel of  the compression post?
> Does the small panel attached 90 degrees to the  comp. post get removed 
> separately. Talking about the side the head  door closes to.
> 
> 1/2" plywood is the correct  thickness?
> 
> Thank you for the information.
> 
>  Steve
> 
> --- In [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) _ 
(mailto:[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) ) , 
>  JWambo8566@ wrote:
> >
> > 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, 
> > scantino@ 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
> >
>



Reply via email to