E
Ed Schenck
Having read and heard so much about the Hunter plant tour we made it part of this year’s plan. By coming to Florida on I-75 it brought us right to Alachua, a small town and strange place for a sailboat plant. A couple from Belgium joined us for the tour. They own a DuFour 36 so added a perspective to what we were seeing.The building of a Hunter sailboat is an amazing feat. What looks like a nine to twelve month project is completed in nine days for the smaller boats and around eighteen for the larger boats. I thought the molds would be some exotic metal. In fact they are fiberglass. I assume the smooth finish is gelcoat, red in the ones that we saw. So they spray gelcoat onto gelcoat then start laying up the glass and resin.I forgot to ask about coring in the hull. I had heard that they were cored above the waterline but I saw no evidence of that. The hulls that I saw all looked solid but maybe you cannot tell from looking.We saw how the gelcoat stuck to the mold in a few places and the resulting dull spots on the hull or deck. We saw how they repaired those spots so that you cannot see the flaw. And the darker non-skid comes out of the molds looking perfect.We saw H41 #157 and H44 #175 at the end of the line. Or was it the other way around? There is just so much to see and try to remember. We saw how the new soft headliners go in, naugahyde I think. And how they can be removed if necessary for access to wiring or, fat chance, a leak. Even the H386 now has the soft liner. Some models have a glass/gelcoat headliner in the rear of the boat, hard to recall which ones. Our guide, Mark Arnold, thought H33 #127 was already outside. There were two lines of that boat, one off each line every three days.The cabinetry shop was fascinating. Mike says they make everything except compound curved wood. They outsource that. Not sure where I have ever seen any on a Hunter. Those louvered doors? We watched them being made. The keels are still Mars Metal and most of the rudders are Foss Foam. They do make some rudders at the plant. I was surprised how beefy the rudder/steering system is on the new boats with the Lewmar(Whitlock) pedestal. Very heavy duty arm and rod arrangement. Easy to add a below-deck autohelm.I was impressed with the hull/deck joint. They use screws every four to six inches with 5200 in the joint. Then they immediately drill and bolt every ten to twelve inches. All the bolts, nuts, and screwheads are covered with a sealant. Then the rubber cover goes on after everything sets. Quality control seemed to be well considered. The boats go to a little lake for a float test. They get two "rain" tests. Our guide thought a lot of the leak issues were due to transport. He said they do not leak when they go on the trucks. All in all a very worthwhile side trip. Any weekday at 0900, 1100, and 1300. Be there fifteen minutes early for the sign in and video.