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		Nancy Berg
On the 4th time we pulled up the centerboard, the line broke. It was shreaded about 10 inches from the board itself.  We spent 2 memorable days in a fiberglass repair yard in Truth Or Consequences, NM, with the boat on a hoist and getting instructions for a do-it-yourself repair by cell phone from Greg at Hunter.  He was a big help. He talked us thru the repair and helped salvage a ruined vacation. ( We had planned our cruise thru the Sea of Cortez for a year and that included buying a new Hunter.)However, the first fix did not work.  At the end of the first day, we thought we were done.  We tried to pull up the centerboard and it would not move.  We had to drop the whole thing again and start over.  The new line was shreaded half through so it was a good thing we did.The next morning we searched the town for a new line and more parts and tackled the job again.  Apparently the bracket has extra holes ( maybe for other models) and we picked a wrong one.The schematic in the manual did not help. ( the pins dropped out when the board came out so we couldn't re-construct from what we saw)We discovered that there was a metal burr in the pipe that goes thru the hull.  This is where the centerboard line goes thru the hull.  It was fairly small, but right at the spot where the 2 lines had shreaded. It was the only thing possible to cause the damage, so we finally found a tool that would reach in there and ground off the burr.We passed the line thru that spot several times to be sure we had fixed the snag, before re-assembling the centerboard and mounting it.I'd be curious to know if anyone else has had a similar problem. (Given some of the posts about new Hunter quality problems)Nancy BergH260 Ay Chihuahua (no longer Zia)ALbuquerque, NM