swing keel spacer bearing

snick

.
Mar 21, 2022
7
Paceship P14 west hill
I am repairing a swing keel centerboard on a P14 Paceship. The original had a plastic spacer in the centerboard hole , which the 3/8 inch pivot bolt went through. The plastic spacer went through the swing keel centerboard, acting like a bearing over the pivot bolt. I need a replacement plastic spacer. The original spacer is very worn and appears to be 1 1/2 length, 7/8 od and just over 3/8 to accept the 3/8 pivot bolt .
Looking online, I see some LDPE and HDPE polyethene, which say they dont swell in water so thats a possibility.
Any suggestions on what type of spacer material that would hold up to boating environment? Thanks

I added a picture below. This is what I found when I dropped the swing keel centerboard. The black spacer fits in the centerboard hole. The long 3/8 bolt pivots in the black spacer. Its unclear if that spacer, which appearently was acting as a bearing, was fixed in the centerboard hole or if it was lose in the hole. Over the years the black plastic roller wore and also elongated the hole in the centerboard. The plan is to repair the elongated hole with epoxy and fiberglass cloth and then drill in a new plastic spacer bearing, which the 3/8 bolt will travel through.
 

Attachments

Last edited:

LloydB

.
Jan 15, 2006
927
Macgregor 22 Silverton
A couple pieces of schedule 160 3/8 PVC might work or maybe even just a stack of washers an inch and a half wide on each side.
 

dLj

.
Mar 23, 2017
4,434
Belliure 41 Back in the Chesapeake
If you have a photo or sketch of the part you are looking to replace it would help to answer your question. As stated, it's hard to see exactly what you've got. It sounds like a lot more than a simple spacer.

dj
 

snick

.
Mar 21, 2022
7
Paceship P14 west hill
If you have a photo or sketch of the part you are looking to replace it would help to answer your question. As stated, it's hard to see exactly what you've got. It sounds like a lot more than a simple spacer.

dj
Thank You, I just added a picture.
 

dLj

.
Mar 23, 2017
4,434
Belliure 41 Back in the Chesapeake
I'd buy a piece of this and make the part.


dj
 
Jan 19, 2010
12,610
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
LDPE will mush over time. HDPE will bet brittle over time.

I'd use SS washers or a teflon-like plastic (a.k.a. fluoropolymers) if you want it to last the rest of your life.

 

snick

.
Mar 21, 2022
7
Paceship P14 west hill
I am repairing a swing keel centerboard on a P14 Paceship. The original had a plastic spacer in the centerboard hole , which the 3/8 inch pivot bolt went through. The plastic spacer went through the swing keel centerboard, acting like a bearing over the pivot bolt. I need a replacement plastic spacer. The original spacer is very worn and appears to be 1 1/2 length, 7/8 od and just over 3/8 to accept the 3/8 pivot bolt .
Looking online, I see some LDPE and HDPE polyethene, which say they dont swell in water so thats a possibility.
Any suggestions on what type of spacer material that would hold up to boating environment? Thanks

I added a picture below. This is what I found when I dropped the swing keel centerboard. The black spacer fits in the centerboard hole. The long 3/8 bolt pivots in the black spacer. Its unclear if that spacer, which appearently was acting as a bearing, was fixed in the centerboard hole or if it was lose in the hole. Over the years the black plastic roller wore and also elongated the hole in the centerboard. The plan is to repair the elongated hole with epoxy and fiberglass cloth and then drill in a new plastic spacer bearing, which the 3/8 bolt will travel through.
Thanks to all for the help and comments! I ended up buying spacers from Mcmaster and the swing keel is back in action. I now am going to apply 4200 sealant to the pivot bolt. There is a rubber washer, stainless washer on both ends of the bolt which seal against the fiberglass of the boat.
I plan to back out the pivot bolt and apply the sealant between pivot bolt head and stainless washer as well as the other end of the pivot bolt nut and washer. Is that enough sealant or should I also apply sealant on both sides of the rubber washer as well as the end threads of the bolt?
 
Jan 19, 2010
12,610
Hobie 16 & Rhodes 22 Skeeter Charleston
If the rubber is thick enough, it should do the trick without sealant. I've also made my own gaskets using goop and making a damn out of masking tape around the washer (see pic)/.
gasket.jpg
gasket2.jpg
gasket3.jpg


I've also seen people use 4200 to cover the entire bolt head but I don't recommend that. Lack of oxygen can cause SS to undergo crevis oxidation.