Hey folks,
I've got a Hunter 22 that has been having trouble sailing into the wind. I figured it had something to do with the swing keel not fully lowering.
Last year I replaced the nylon bushing as the pin was loose in it from wear. Turns out the loose pin was intentional as the PO did a sloppy job centering the hole for his replacement bushing to fit in. The pin would have been on angle (higher on port/lower on starboard), so he must have drilled out a new 1/2" hole for the pin so that it could rest straight. Result, straight pin, but loose keel.
When I got a replacement bushing made, I quickly realized the situation, and hoped the keel being slightly angled would make little difference in the aerodynamics (I was told by a marine specialist that a H22 is like a camper not a racer, should have little effect but for the tiller). I was making these repairs on a trailer and had very restricted access to the area. A year later and the performance has gotten worse and worse.
Last week a had her hauled out, and it appears that the keel is only dropping halfway. I dropped out the keel and brought it to a guy to bore out a new centered hole, and fabricate a slightly bigger bushing and new pin to fit in new centered hole. Not sure if I'm doing the right thing here. If I glass in a new bushing and pin, making the rotation point where the pin rests on the brackets, is that a problem? I see in the forums some indication that the OEM configuration was an outer bushing sleeve that the inner bushing would rotate in, making the pin static in the brackets? But I see threads where it appears guys are glassing in the pins just like I'm thinking of doing? I'm super confused, meanwhile, hemorrhaging money at the boat yard.
Thanks all,
Viesail
I've got a Hunter 22 that has been having trouble sailing into the wind. I figured it had something to do with the swing keel not fully lowering.
Last year I replaced the nylon bushing as the pin was loose in it from wear. Turns out the loose pin was intentional as the PO did a sloppy job centering the hole for his replacement bushing to fit in. The pin would have been on angle (higher on port/lower on starboard), so he must have drilled out a new 1/2" hole for the pin so that it could rest straight. Result, straight pin, but loose keel.
When I got a replacement bushing made, I quickly realized the situation, and hoped the keel being slightly angled would make little difference in the aerodynamics (I was told by a marine specialist that a H22 is like a camper not a racer, should have little effect but for the tiller). I was making these repairs on a trailer and had very restricted access to the area. A year later and the performance has gotten worse and worse.
Last week a had her hauled out, and it appears that the keel is only dropping halfway. I dropped out the keel and brought it to a guy to bore out a new centered hole, and fabricate a slightly bigger bushing and new pin to fit in new centered hole. Not sure if I'm doing the right thing here. If I glass in a new bushing and pin, making the rotation point where the pin rests on the brackets, is that a problem? I see in the forums some indication that the OEM configuration was an outer bushing sleeve that the inner bushing would rotate in, making the pin static in the brackets? But I see threads where it appears guys are glassing in the pins just like I'm thinking of doing? I'm super confused, meanwhile, hemorrhaging money at the boat yard.
Thanks all,
Viesail



