[ham] Re: [Rhodes22-list] Mayday on the Hudson and other ironies
Michael Meltzer
mjm at michaelmeltzer.com
Sat Jul 26 14:01:21 EDT 2003
Roger it is the space I am reacting to, SOP in the build is to pour buckets of sand/polyester (along with lead/iron scrape metal
depending on the year) into that area, it forms up tight with the hull reinforcing the area. Their should be no voids by simple
pouring process(famous last words I know). Their is still a question in my mind exactly where the hole is but I wounding what took
out the ballast and is also causing the suspicion the it is a repair that when wrong. Pictures!!
MJM
----- Original Message -----
From: "Roger Pihlaja" <cen09402 at centurytel.net>
To: "The Rhodes 22 mail list" <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 10:03 AM
Subject: Re: [ham] Re: [Rhodes22-list] Mayday on the Hudson and other ironies
> Dear High & Dry,
>
> Michael's advice about needing to completely dry out the boat ASAP before
> starting repairs is well taken. However, you mentioned filling in some
> 1-1/2 gal void space in the keel with concrete. Please give that plan a lot
> more thought before you actually do it. You will improve the boat's
> righting moment & give the ability to carry a little more sail area in
> stronger winds. However, adding that much concrete to the aft part of the
> keel will affect the fore/aft trim of the boat, causing it to sink down by
> the stern. Think about how much wetted surface area there is in the hull
> under the cockpit. If you change the angle of attack on that much wetted
> surface area by even a couple of degrees, you will add an incredible amount
> of drag & permanently slow the boat down in light air, heavy air, motoring -
> all the time. The effect will be most noticable in light air. Your fuel
> mileage while motoring will drop. You will also use up some fraction of the
> boat's reserve bouyancy in the stern, which will decrease your boat's
> ability to carry passengers.
>
> Roger Pihlaja
> S/V Dynamic Equilibrium
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Michael Meltzer" <mjm at michaelmeltzer.com>
> To: "The Rhodes 22 mail list" <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
> Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 1:26 AM
> Subject: Re: [ham] Re: [Rhodes22-list] Mayday on the Hudson and other
> ironies
>
>
> > standard thickness should be about 3/4-1 inch in that area, OTHO the 1973
> outsource with build all over the place, 1/32 sound like a
> > bad patch job with a single lay of glass, does it look like a patch came
> apart? maybe after the PO fix a grounding or a drop?
> >
> > you are going to need the boat on real boat stands for a while, Find the
> limit of the thin area, step zero might be to cut it out,
> > fill the blast with a sand/epoxy mix, mat/glass over and flair, sand,
> epoxy overcoat. sound like you are going to need the cb trunk
> > opened. That might be the session, but you need to get the hull dried and
> the work done before the temp go below 50 at night.
> >
> > Can you get a digital camera on it?, IIRC you are in the industry, can you
> get it into a yard and do you want to?
> >
> > BTW, look under the cockpit and in the bow for the foam, some people have
> reported it missing, most case PO pulling it thinking it
> > was waterlogged.
> >
> > MJM
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: <FNuttersNY at aol.com>
> > To: <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
> > Sent: Friday, July 25, 2003 11:31 PM
> > Subject: [ham] Re: [Rhodes22-list] Mayday on the Hudson and other ironies
> >
> >
> > > Well folks we had a hell of a day, so far the best sailing day on the
> > > river,estuary, what ever. Sailing along in the middle of the river we
> came about and
> > > suddenly went no where. We heard banging in way of the centerboard and
> > > though it had come loose but it still felt like it was raising and
> lowering ok.
> > > But the banging did not stop so we pulled in sails and motered for home
> about 5
> > > miles away. We stoped at the foot of the Newburg/Beacon bridge to
> watch the
> > > tide action so we could time our eta suddenly water started to enter the
> boat.
> > > With both pumps and both engines running we high tailed it for home.
> (Back
> > > to the old 2stk 4stk lots of hp not much hp and all that) we made it in
> 35
> > > min. By that time we had ankle deep water in the cabin but since we
> talked
> > > about how great she floats (unsinkable and all that) I was not woried.
> When we
> > > tide up at the dock it realy started to come in and we had to put in a
> 1/2hp
> > > sump pump to get a head of it, Luckely it was high tide and we got
> her on the
> > > trailer. To everyones astonishment a hole the width of the keel an 3
> > > inches long helped empty the boat. It is the very aft section of the
> keel starting
> > > at about one inch from where it fairs into the hull and the 3 inches
> down
> > > along the vertical edge of the keel just behind the centerboard trunk.
> How it
> > > got there no one knows it's in the damndest spot. One thing bugs me
> however the
> > > fiberglass in that area is very thin not mor then a 1/32. The void
> space is
> > > not very big maybe 11/2 gallons worth. I'm tempted to fill it with
> concrete.
> > > Now repairs and improvements. Advice wellcome comentary aswell.
> Yours
> > > trully High and Dry.
> > > __________________________________________________
> > > Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help? www.rhodes22.org/list
> > >
> >
> > __________________________________________________
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> >
> >
>
>
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