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The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ.
The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.
I pulled by boat out of the water and discovered whats causing the severe centerboard clunking. The hole in the centerboard has worn severely and is much larger than the 1 inch brass pin with fiberglass bushing.
The centerboard does have shims that are appropriate that stabilize the center board when it is up into the trunk but all of the movement and clunking is from the pivot point.
Can any one suggest how I should fix this?
I am thinking of filling in the hole completely with fiberglass and resin then drilling a new one inch hole. I am not sure this will be strong enough.
The pivot hole in the centerboard is also in the transition area between the flat area of the centerboard and the shaped foil area. Is this correct? I would think it would be more effective if it was moved forward to the flat area . This would in move the centerboard back toward the stern at least an inch maybe 2 inches which may change the way the boat sails.
A sailboat's designer positions the mast and the keel so that the two function together in a fairly delicate balance. If you move either the keel or the mast, you'll disturb the balance between the center of effort of the sailplan and the center of lateral resistance of the keel. I don't know how much it would affect it to move the hole a couple inches, but it might be fairly significant. It would be best to not move the hole.
In most states, if you sell a house, you're required by law to disclose the existence of any hidden condition that might adversely affect the value of the thing being sold. In some states that principle may be extended to items of personal property of a certain type, like a boat. If you have altered the fundamental relationship between the CE and CLR, I think such a law would obligate you to disclose that fact to any potential buyer. Most buyers would run from such a disclosure.
Unless someone here has a better suggestion, I like your idea of filling in the hole and then re-drilling it. Although you're not sure it will be strong enough, there's one way to find out, eh!
Steve Milby J/24 "Captiva Wind" previously C&C 35, Cal 25, C25 TR/FK, C22 Past Commodore
In our area I've heard of a few Catalina 25 swing keel owners who have taken their keels to a machine shop that drilled out the original hole in the keel and pressed in a metal bushing/sleeve with a 1 inch inside diameter. I need to get more information but they have said that the result has been successful. I'm thinking that something similar could be done with the C 250 centerboard.
Your photos reveal what could cause the clunking. It appears that your suspension arrangement is in good shape. The fiberglass around the pin housing does not seem to have worn/cracked but is most likely as per factory design. If, IMHO the suspension pin housing is secure it would not require any work.
Adding new spacers and placing them in an off center position as shown in previous discussions will eliminate movement and clunking. The existing spacers will still allow movement by forces placed on either side of center board.
The center board on our '95 C250 WB is secure on the suspension pin but has some movement on the board itself. This, however is stopped by the off center located spacers which does stop clunking and movement in the trunk.
Henk & Johanna "Floating", a few off your "barnacles". "Someday Lady" '95 C250WB #151 ('03 - 2016) "Sea ya" 30ft Bayliner (04-2018 - 09-2018) "Mariah" '96 C250WB #191 (05-2019 - 15-05-2023) "Lady J" '00 C250WK #499 (05-2021 - 09-2022)
When the centerboard is in the down position, the head fits into the trunk. If you move the pivot, it won't fit in the trunk. While the centerboard is removed, take a look at the trunk area.
I re-read my archive post from 2006. My hull is #793 and another reply was hull #841 and your hull is #848. These hulls are pretty close together. Since my problem was 10-years ago, you have probably had this problem for awhile.
The bushing idea was perfect. I just epoxied in a 1.75" bushing with the needed 1" hole. This gives a level surface for the keel hangers that is the exact width to keep the centerboard from wobbling at the pivot point. This with the spacers should fix me up.
I should be back on the water once the glue dries and the anti fouling paint is applied.
Notice: The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ. The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.