Just wondering if any other Cherubini H36 owners (or other Hunter Cherubini owners of the +/- 1980 era) have noticed the same as my boat.
That is the keel doesn't quite line up in size with the hull stub -- as in the attached pictures.
In the pictures, while it may look like there is a camouflaged gap between the hull and the keel, this is not the case. The appearance is only from shadows of fairing with life-caulk. At the haul-out during which the pictures were taken, I checked the actual mating surface of keel to hull. Spot on. No "smile" or gap what-so-ever.
I've owned my 1980 constructed boat now for seven years. I did DIY work on the hard for the first 5-6 months of ownership and certainly noticed the misalignment at that time. And I have since hauled twice. Never have I found evidence of new FRP layup or cracking that would indicate a possible hard grounding which required a change of the original keel. The keel bolts and nuts and bilge are in great condition with absolutely no leakage of seawater into the bilge. Certainly the keel bolts match up with the original holes drilled into the bilge base. There is no indication of other previous alignments.
My thought is that Hunter at the time of manufacture might have miscalculated the actual keel dimensions vis-a-vis the keel stub shape for the H36. Or maybe took a short-cut and installed a H33 keel?
Any other conjectures?
That is the keel doesn't quite line up in size with the hull stub -- as in the attached pictures.
In the pictures, while it may look like there is a camouflaged gap between the hull and the keel, this is not the case. The appearance is only from shadows of fairing with life-caulk. At the haul-out during which the pictures were taken, I checked the actual mating surface of keel to hull. Spot on. No "smile" or gap what-so-ever.
I've owned my 1980 constructed boat now for seven years. I did DIY work on the hard for the first 5-6 months of ownership and certainly noticed the misalignment at that time. And I have since hauled twice. Never have I found evidence of new FRP layup or cracking that would indicate a possible hard grounding which required a change of the original keel. The keel bolts and nuts and bilge are in great condition with absolutely no leakage of seawater into the bilge. Certainly the keel bolts match up with the original holes drilled into the bilge base. There is no indication of other previous alignments.
My thought is that Hunter at the time of manufacture might have miscalculated the actual keel dimensions vis-a-vis the keel stub shape for the H36. Or maybe took a short-cut and installed a H33 keel?
Any other conjectures?
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