Scott wrote:
A couple of times this summer, while moving through a narrow channel with confused waves, it occurred to me that it would be very, very, bad if my rudder failed right at that moment.
With the boat in storage the rudder is now in my garage for inspection. I added a photo album showing the current state of my rudder. I chipped away at the outer layer with a pick in a couple of locations. In general the 'stuff' under the cracks in the white section are solid and very difficult for me to press into with the pick. The 'stuff' under the crack in the red section is soft and easy for me to dig out with the pick.
I also took some measurements to get a quote for a professional replacement. The quote came back at something like half the amount I paid for the boat.
So I am trying to decide between a few options.
1. Pay over $2k for a new fiberglass rudder.
2. Pay a little less for an HDPE kick-up rudder.
3. Grind out the cracks in the rudder until I hit something solid and then use thickened epoxy plus fiberglass to repair it.
I don't think can make my own new fiberglass rudder. I think this would be so time consuming that I would not be able to finish any other boat projects this winter.
Does anyone have an opinion on this rudder? The price seems good, but I wonder if plain HDPE will be rigid enough. Over time I imagine it could bend back and forth and eventually fail.
This is not exactly a junk-rig specific topic, but I enjoy interacting with the people here in our little junk rig cult more than the sailing community in general. :)
If no one has an opinion to share I will try to find some other S2 6.7 owners.
I do have some rudder experience in that just 8 months after we returned to New Zealand on Footprints following our offshore voyage to New Caledonia an incident occurred which lead me to inspect the condition of her solid timber rudder, and I found that a large part of the rudder stock was full of rot, and had no doubt been in that condition during our two ocean passages, so of course there were panic thoughts of 'that could have failed mid ocean'. I think the thing that saved our bacon was the fact that there was a solid 25mm thick teak rudder cheek glued to each side of the rudder stock. Anyway I made a new rudder and in the process improved the shape of the rudder which was very beneficial to the handling characteristics of 'Footprints'.
Is your rudder of fiberglass construction, and maybe with a foam core? I could not see anything in the photos which indicated a serious problem The strength of the rudder would be in the fiberglass either side. If the rudder is fiberglass, and there were concerns about the condition, and it were my rudder, I would carry out fiberglass repairs to the existing rudder. If there were areas of concern I would grind back to clean fiberglass, with tapered edges, and then re-laminate with fiberglass to strengthen the area of concern. I would not use epoxy for this, but rather polyester resin which would have been used in the original construction. If you were really concerned about the rudder condition you could seriously sand back the outer surface and then laminate on a couple of layers woven rovings, using polyester resin, and over the final layer apply a layer of peel ply to give a smooth almost paint ready finish surface. But that rudder should still be very strong given the size of boat, and certainly you should not need to splash out hundreds of dollars on a new rudder.
I couldn't quite see where the red section is, There looked to be some damage at the bottom of the rudder which is to be expected for a boat of that age. The rudder could also be hollow being made up of two halves glued together. If there were any splitting or separation of the join that would be very easy to repair by grinding back a layer and then applying a couple of layers of fiberglass tape,