Run Aground Repairs

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Joe Luciano

It is said that there are two types of sailors. Those that have run aground and those that will run aground. This past weekend, after ten years of sailing my boat, I became one of those that has now run aground on my '87 C-30 standard rig. The details of the grounding are not important, although in hindsight it was avoidable (as they all are). The fact that another boat did the same thing in the same spot a little while later at least made me feel like I wasn't the only one prone to a judgement error. The grounding was a bit hard, as I was powering into a cove for anchorage. It didn't sound good when we hit and the boat lurched forward with what I remember to be an awful sound. The only good news was that it was relatively easy to put the engine in reverse and back off the hard ground that I plowed up on. Only the keel touched ground, nothing near the shaft or prop. No noticeable changes observed from topside. The tops of the keel bolts looked normal, tight and unchanged. No leaks into the bilge. This weekend I'll rent a wet suit and tank and take the plunge to view the damages. Of concern is damage to the lead ballast and any damage to the hull / ballast joint. My question is for those who have had this experience in the past. What kind of damage did you have and how did you repair it? If you mess up the lead ballast, how do you repair it? What else was an issue? Bolting? I realize that there are lots of factors on any grounding. What you hit, at what angle and how hard. But, I wanted to get a range of experiences from those who have been there. Any responses are appreciated. Thanks.
 
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Ray E.

welcome to the grounding club

I've had a grounding also. If you have no leaks you probably are ok. The lead keel will take a lot of punishment by mashing. If you are worried hire a diver to check. I repaired my keel (at haulout)by shaving the lead bumps with a knife and applying marinetex to the spot and sanding to smooth. It has held up well for two years so far.It is recommended that you put a light coat of epoxy (marinetex)and rough up the surface thru it to keep the air away from the surface for better bonding. If you are lucky like me the mounting will be ok.
 
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Todd Osborne

What to check

I ran aground last year & here's what I checked/found. 1) C30 are tough. If you are still floating, chances are you're in good shape 2) check for leaks (you did) 3) check keel bolts (you did) 4) Check keel damage. The lead keel is soft metal and can take a real beating, check the "catalina smile" for seperation 5) the hull immediately aft of the keel will take the brunt of the force. it hopefully flexed & didn't crack (dry bilge is a good sign) inspect there carefully 6) inspect the shaft tube and strut for alignment/damage since this area may have contorted during impact. 7) lastly, tell us where it happened so that we may take heed!
 
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Ben McAndrew

it's just a hunk of lead

Hi. My dad Has an O'day 28. We talk it into a popular bay with a pretty soft bottom and run it aground ferquently during the summer if the morings are all filled up; since we aren't allowed to anchor. We do it very gently though. since the keel is just a hunk of solid lead, you can't do much to it, and I wouldn't bother with reparing it. but I wouldn't run it aground hard more than once, it might damage the internal stringers, especially if you do it REAL hard into hard bottom. we don't find accsidently running aground a problem anymore as of last year. (My dad mounted a depth sounder to the trailing edge of the keel where the draft is deepest.-BM
 
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Joe Luciano

Where it happened

Todd, It happened near the entrance to Prevost harbor at Stuart Island. The tide was -3.0 and the current running stronger than I noticed. It was pulling me northwest and if you look on the chart, it shows a 2.0 ft. depth in that area near shore. Since I wasn't really that close to shore, I figured it was OK, but obviously the area I contacted was a little less than 5 ft. at the time I hit. I ended up diving on the keel to have a look and all I did was mash about a 6" area at the leading edge of the fin keel. No changes at the keel to hull joint. Everything else looked fine. I feel lucky. Plan to do minor repair at next haulout in the spring.
 
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