Earlier report
Dan,I had pulled an email about this off of the bulletin around April 12 to send to my dealer. I'm not sure if it is still in the archives. My 356 was fine at launch in mid-July. I'll certainly check again in a few weeks when it comes out for the winter.I'd love to hear how you come out on this.Here's the earlier post, with the relevant section highlighted.We've just taken our maiden sail Submitted by Joe Hoing of Ray Roberts Marina, Sanger Texas on 04/11 at 08:41AM regarding Hunter 356 Other than our check-out sail with the dealer rep., we sailed our first full day Easter Sunday. She handles like a dream in 8 - 14 knot winds. We averaged 4.5 to 7.6 knots. >>>The main thing you need to check before your 356 goes in the water is the aft or trailing edge of the keel where it meets the hull. Hunter has or had a keel design problem and the keel does not exactly follow the conture of the hull. They compensated by filling in the gap with epoxy (sorry, I forgot the exact brand name)and is ok unless the keel is bumped or set down too hard on aft part of the keel toe. If that bump occurs, the epoxy cracks and must be ground out and I recommend filling and glassing over the gap before you do the bottom job.<<<Also, I have a fairly severe vibration problem at RPMs over 2800. The engine in neutral is smooth as a kitten all the way up to 4000 rpms but put it in gear and the throdle will not stay past 2500 to 2800 without vibrating back down. The companionway hatch rattles like crazy until you bring it back to 2500 rpm. The dealer has re-aligned the drive shaft but this did not cure the problem. We have the standard two blade prop and all appeared to be straight and correct before it went in the water. If anyone has any ideas as to what to check next, I am all ears.All in all we are very happy with our new 356 and are the envy of the lake.