The garage
Thanks to Mr Beazell for his insightful and knowledgeable comments! And how appropriate that he uses the 'garage' for storing the garbage prior to taking it out to the street! [laugh]The oil-canning is perfectly typical of taking mid-range production sailboats to sea– and Mr Beazell's solution is textbook. I'm not sure it would actually delam but I can't imagine it would make you feel good to see it.Consider also ensuring, whatever drain modifications are made, that they are fully fibreglassed (no use of hose, pipe, and associated fittings, etc., especially not PVC!). Use woven roving or Fabmat but NOT merely cloth and definitely not mat alone. Once they are glassed between hull and cockpit pan they essentially become structural. Let them only add rigidity– do not attempt to 'fix' any shape or add strength to anything by altering the drain pipes as they will transmit the stress (and shape change) directly to the hull.People may be interested to know that the area eventually used for the dinghy garage on the 54 was originally considered for:1. big motorboat-type cockpit fitted with transom doors for freestanding deck chairs. etc., creating a sort of sailing SUV (my dad's idea);2. open-transom steering cockpit for racing version fitted with big wheel, leaving a 'passenger'/jib handling cockpit forward of the mizzen (in fact Warren L. favoured the ketch version);3. after 'master suite' with head, bathtub, etc. making the boat ideal for Caribbean/Keys chartering (my idea).Shows you what marketing hath wrought in the end. You got a garage. [sigh]JC