D
Den Drown
Hi guys,I am trying to change out the boot for the stuffing box on my '85 Hunter 34 which is currently in drydock. To change the boot I need to disconnect the shaft from the engine to remove the stuffing box itself so that I can slide on the new boot.I've removed the two set-screw style bolts from the flange holding the shaft, and we've decoupled the shaft flange from the engine flange by removing the four bolts that hold them together.The problem is that something, and I think it is just rust, is holding the shaft flange to the shaft with a death-grip. We've tried lots of WD-40 and Liquid Wrench and tapping the flange with a mallot in various ways (not too hard). Our latest failure involves putting a socket in the hole of the flange, clamping a metal plate to the other side of the socket, and then putting pressure on the socket, and thereby the end of the shaft, by tightening down the clamps. We succeded only in creating a socket-sized indentation in the metal plate.If I stick my finger in the hole, I feel some kind a ring around the edge of the hole right up against the shaft. I am guessing this is rust, but in case it was part of the flange, we selected a socket which would fit inside this "ring". We tried to take care that the socket wouldn't drop down over the ring as we were putting on the plate and the clamps. I tried to grow a third hand to facilitate creating this assembly, but no luck there either.I saw in the forum archives that someone reinserted the bolts to the engine flange to squeeze a socket between the two flanges. Our bolts were not quite long enough to do this--perhaps because I insisted on having a thin piece of metal between the socket and the engine flange to protect the bolt that sticks out the middle of it.Are we missing something, or does anyone have any ideas on what we might try? Are we fighting nearly twenty years of oxidation, or did we forget to remove some little pin somewhere? I know that there is a wedge fitted into the shaft to keep it from rotating within the flange, but I have been assured that this wedge is not stopping us from sliding out the shaft.Thanks for your help,Den DrownHunter 34 - "Kojos'a"