J
james
My (1976) 30' Catalina has keelbolts - apparently made of steel - that were encased in some kind of epoxy. The epoxy has worn down and the nuts and bolts have started to rust. I've cleaned up and removed three of the eight nuts and found that the bolts under the nuts are seemingly in good shape. I've replaced the nuts with stainless steel ones. I've not had any water leak in, thus far. My questions are:1. should I replace the steel nuts with steel nuts? or stainless steel nuts?2. should I encase the whole assembly in epoxy as before? or cover with some sort of corrosion block? 3. Why o' why did Catalina put steel keelbolts in? with steel nuts?Has anyone else experienced this problem? I've been getting advice from local marine shops, but wonder if there isn't a load of info out there on this. According to expert in Seattle: The worst case scenario in terms of getting it fixed is apparently to put in a one or two new keel bolts - ignoring the existing ones - which involves hauling the boat out of the water, and drilling both sideways into the keel and downward from the bilge to attach new bolts. General advice I've been getting: This is a common thing in Catalina's of this vintage, and the keel is held on both by the bolts and the epoxy between the keel and the boat. The boat won't sink unless the bolts are significantly degraded and there is a shock to the keel. Any other thoughts on this?