For Vega 239, there is a parallel history. Around 1985, I also found
water dripping. During next season, the rudder suddenly got loose
during a wet cruise turning freely on the shaft although with some
friction. The boat handled well with just jib and main, never tested
that before...
Split the rudder and found one side well in contact with the flat steel
that was used to turn the blade. But the weld to the shaft was cracked
and showed a nice fatigue school book case. Weld just some 40 mm
long and on one side of the joint only. A design with a bitter criminal
taste, considering the risks for the boat and crew had it cracked in
open sea.
I welded a rather long flat bar 200 high, 60x6 on each side of the shaft
with intermittent welds and welded the old bar to both. I then added
a second some 150 mm lower with some 250 length into the rudder,
pointing a bit downwards.
Patched all up on one side of the rudder with filler and mat and epoxy.
Made five large holes on the loose half and glued it all together.
Made the joint areas flatter to add epoxy. Patched mat and epoxy
to the open enlarged holes. Fairly well filled up inside. Ground it nice
and added top gelcoat and paint. Rudder got some 0.7 kg heavier,
but it feels much safer now. The bottom aft corner has a 22 mm hole
for emergency steering, just in case.
I would not expect that your internal rudder design is much different.
A brutal splitting is better to do now rather than waiting for the
crack to come when you least want it.
Fair winds, Arne, Vega 239
WL wrote: