B
Brad
This is my first year on a mooring with my '85 25.5, and the winds here in the Western LI Sound are rivaling the San Francisco Bay this year. Isabel at 40-45, the week following brought 50mph, and since then it's been plenty of 20 to 35mph days. The toerail on my boat stops about 2 feet from the nose - from that point on it's just the fiberglass, with 2 cleats mounted right on the edge - no chocks. The glass lips out and down - there's a gap between the underside of this lip and the hull. The mooring has held well, and I guess it's fine if the boat is directly in line with the mooring, but with all the heaving to and fro, the boat's been tossed left and right. Seems as the bow goes left of the mooring ball, the port line takes the strain to the right, putting all the pressure on that hollow lip below the cleat, and vice versa. The lines are starting to chew up that unsupported lip (the lines show virtually no chafe, by the way)- I'm seeing cracks and the glass mat underneath one chip. I certainly don't want this to continue - has anyone had this problem? I'm thinking there must be a way to beef up this area. Molded steel plate? Glass the hollow lip solid? Thanks all.