Sounds like your rudder might be overbalanced
I don't know the Hunter 260 model from personal experience but I understand that the rudder is able to hinge up and down (as is the auxiliary rudder on our Legend 43, but that is a different story). In fact, according to some of the H 260 rudder drawings posted earlier this month, in the fully downward position a considerable fraction of the total wetted rudder area extends forward of an imaginary line through the rudder shaft down to the lower edge of the rudder. In other word, this is a (fully or partially) balanced rudder design that should not produce the same strong centering forces that are at work on an unbalanced rudder (such as our Legend 43 rudder).Furthermore, when heeling strongly, some of the wetted area behind the shaft axis may be lifted above the waterline while the lower area extending forward of the shaft axis remains fully submerged. This, in and by itself, might temporarily produce an overbalanced rudder. However, in that case, other H 260 owners should have noticed the same problem and would probably have responded to your post.Therefore, it is possible that the previous owner made a repair or design modificiation which increased the degree of forward hinging, or the rudder hardware became misaligned during an incident, thereby increasing the overbalancing tendency. Perhaps, also, you tend to heel more strongly than the average H260 sailor and/or your stern rides a tad higher.In your place I would check the following: (1) that she does not float way above her waterline at the stern; (2) that the rudder is not overbalanced through a mechanical problem; and (3) that you are not simply heeling too much.Good luck!Flying Dutchman