How to get a dry bilge. Problem for Hunters.
It's not that hard to make a boat tight and dry. Water gets in from three places: (a) underwater fittings, and (b) leaks above the waterline. The first kind of leak, from throughhulls, usually is visible. If your bilge is dry when you splash down, and gets wet in the next hour, you know its coming from an underwater fitting. Inspect all the through-hulls, or follow the water trail from the bilge to the one that is the culprit.The second kind of leak is easiest to find from inside the boat when it rains. After an hour of good, steady rain, look for water coming in by runing your finger along the hull-deck joint, under all ports, around hatches, and under the partners (if your mast is keel-stepped). Wet is pretty obvious.The problem with many Hunters is that most of the places where you might have a leak are impossible to reach from the inside, the extensive pan makes it impossible to trace the water trail, and it also holds water trapped until the boat heels. People have suggested turning the boat into a pressure chamber and looking for bubbles from the outside, but that is a lot of trouble, and I doubt it will find all leaks. Others have suggested sealing arbitrary outside fittings until the leak seems to go away. The number of posts on this BB about mysterious and recurring leaks suggests that Hunter has not thought much about this problem.You're on the right track. Good luck.