Step "sandwich" description & fix
Here is a recent post on the structure, problems, and a fix for the mast step/compression post on the h27:The bottom (fiberglass floor resting on the grid which is glassed to the hull) is seldom the problem on these boats. If there is a depression around the foot of the mast, though this bears further investigation. The most common problem is rot of the wodden cores between the aluminum mast step and the compression post. (the aluminum step on our h27 is a 3-4 inch stub that is bolted through the deck and liner, and fits into the bottom of the mast.) The "sandwich" under the aluminum step goes like this, top down:Aluminum step.Fiberglass layer around the step area.Wood layer 1. End balsa or plywood to add stiffness under the mast.The deck top fiberglass layer.Wood layer 2. Usually end balsa, but plywood has also been reported.Deck bottom fiberglass layer.Cabin liner - fiberglass.What happens is that water seeps into the bolt holes holding the aluminum step down, or along the pipe in the middle for the antenna and other wiring. It gets into the wood, and turns it to mush. Symptoms are:- The stays seem too long.- The cabin liner wraps around the compression post and cabin partition.- The cabin door (if you have one) won't slide.- The above two symptoms disappear when the mast is unstepped.- A moisture survey meter detects excess moisture around the step area.A drill core sample shows rotted wood - this is a destructive test, but may be needed to see if both wood layers are affected. A substitute is the get the wire pipe out (no mean feat) and sample the wood to the sides of the pipe. The repair is to cut out top two the fiberglass layers to expose the step area. scrape back under the fiberglass until you get to clean wood. Let it dry out. Replace the wood with epoxy (and aluminum where appropriate - it's cheaper than epoxy, stiffer, and sets a whole lot faster!) Build the fiberglass layers back with the correct amount of taper (look this up if you you are doing it yourself) to ensure like new strength. Finish the top layer, and blend it into the deck. (You took pictures and measurements before you started, right?) Then drill/fill/drill for the wire pipe, and the bolts holding down the aluminum step. (Drill a hole bigger than you need. Fill it with epoxy. Let it harden, then drill the hole you need in the epoxy. This protects the wood layer from future water infusion with a layer of epoxy.Reassemble, and remount. Step and tune the mast, and sail away!You can do the job if you have the time, and willingness to learn how to do fiberglass. I lacked both, and had an excellent job done by a local yard with a good fiberglass reputation for about $1,100 on our h27. The key consideration is just the time to let all that epoxy set!This is not a difficult repair. And you can end up with a mast step as good (or better) than new.Good luck,DavidLady Lillie'77 h27