bostonhatteras
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2006
- Messages
- 1,475
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 45' CONVERTIBLE-Series I (1968 - 1975)
As part of my trim tab project I’m tackling everything that’s needed in that area, for the most part. I always swore that the packing gland bases leaked. Not a stream of water but there was always some water and never could find the source. Rudders were last repacked 25 years ago but didn’t leak until last year. I dropped out the rudders and decided to remove the packing gland bases too, that’s what the 5/8 bolts I asked about are for. It’s readily obvious that water was able to find its way up into the bilge by looking at the corrosion evidence. I assumed they were bedded in a urethane adhesive as there is factory urethane in other areas of the boat like bulkheads and the shoe box joint of hull/deck. What I found was that there was barely any urethane on the guide out the hull through the actual hull. No adhesive under the bolt heads and not under the base bottom. What the factory did was lay down wet polyester and plop the base into that. The first base I heated a lot with mapp gas thinking I was softening the imaginary urethane. I didn’t bother with any heat for the second base and it literally popped right out with maybe 5-6 pumps of the bottle jack! Socket size of 2 3/8 was a perfect match. We hate to hear it, but there is wood in this Hatteras hull! The leveling of the packing gland is accomplished by plywood and covered with roving. Luckily no rot to be seen.