Ross..
It cracked right at the large nut that was holding the thru-hull to the backing plate. While not a large gaping crack it was "spraying water" which I was able to minimize, or at least re-direct the spray, with rigging tape and then electrical tape over that. I also dove over and stuck a wooden plug up into the through hull but found it very tough to actually "pound" it into place. When they hauled the boat the wooden plug was gone..?? The bilge pump was able to keep up for two days before I could get hauled. At the time I replaced this thru-hull with a Marelon seacock which I screwed to the semi rotted wood backing plate just to get back in the water. Not the right way to do it but I fixed it over the winter..Ross, I only bring this information so those who choose to read it and possibly learn an alternate approach. I obviously don't do this to start disagreement wars and do believe personally that mismatching threads is not necessarily the smartest or safest idea. I also try and bring all the evidence to support it and don't just shoot from the hip. Yes, I'm Mr. Overkill on, many things, but I don't feel it's overkill to use properly matched threads when installing something as important as a device that is supposed to keep water out of your boat. It's funny that the only person who claims to have re-threaded a thru-hull to NPT is a non-registered poster who has only ever had ONE post according to the search tool.. My guess is this "anonymous poster" is an actual member trying to justify and feel good about his or her own installation which they know to have mismatched threads? Perhaps I'm wrong, I've been wrong many times, and hopefully this poster will post a photo for us to show us just how they re-threaded a 6" long thru-hull fitting.Many of the folks defending this mismatching are the same ones touting large measures of safety in many other aspects of boating....