I discovered significant rot in the wooden compression post on my 1990 Hunter 33.5, likely caused by a long-term skylight leak near the mast step. The upper fiberglass structure and lower pedestal appear intact, and there is currently no obvious deck depression.
The post is approximately 3¾" × 4", and at the worst area I measured roughly 2" of internal rot, with sound wood remaining behind it.
I’ve been researching repair options and found another Hunter 33.5 owner who replaced the post with a permanent adjustable steel jack post after removing the original wood post. He did this with:
My proposed method:
Main concerns:
Thanks.
The post is approximately 3¾" × 4", and at the worst area I measured roughly 2" of internal rot, with sound wood remaining behind it.
I’ve been researching repair options and found another Hunter 33.5 owner who replaced the post with a permanent adjustable steel jack post after removing the original wood post. He did this with:
- a steel load-spreading plate at the top,
- adjustable steel post,
- steel base plate at the bottom.
My proposed method:
- Install a temporary structural jack post about 1 inch beside the existing compression post
- Bottom support would sit on solid structural flooring/pedestal (not the shower liner)
- Top support would bear on a load-spreading plate directly against the structural roof beam / casing, not the decorative fiberglass liner
- Gradually preload the jack to transfer part (or most) of the mast compression load
- Remove the rotten compression post and install the permanent steel replacement
Main concerns:
- Is a properly shored adjacent jack enough to safely carry mast compression during removal?
- Any issues with dynamic rig loads / stay tension while docked?
- Would you still recommend slightly easing the rig, or is that unnecessary?
Thanks.
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