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Centerboard replacement


 

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Hi Dudley----I own hull #535, Seannachie.?? I, too, have had the same thought about casting a board out of bronze.?? What's more, there is a small foundry in my town which will be losing its lease soon, but which has much experience in large bronze castings, and might be willing to do the job if we're not talking next year.?? They do a lot of those big seals on courthouses, statuary, and such.?? Do you think others might be interested?? I'm sure any foundry would be much more interested in casting a dozen or so than just one.?? Any thoughts appreciated-----Warren Stein




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kc7zik
 

Hello,

I need help in locating a drawing of centerboard for T27 hull#54. I
want to recast a new one out of bronze. My wife and I purchased her
last summer and are starting to work on things now.

Thanks for any help
Dudley


 

Dudley,
At the old tratan27owners.com someone with a user name of CStroup posted a photo of the centerboard aligned over a 1" grid. I am attempting to contact him to see if he can find this picture. Alternatively Ken may be able to find this photo but I would not be too hopeful of that as it was embedded in the Projects section of the old forum which has not been recovered.
Tartanparts.com will graciously sell you a replacement for $1200 that takes 4-6 weeks for delivery. You might be able to talk to them and see if they will 'give' you the exact dimensions. I am going out on a limb here but I bet that you could get this made by a local metal working shop for well less than half of what they want. I can only assume that your old C/B is gone to the bottom of the ocean so you can't get the dimensions from it.
On a related note I was finally able to paint our centerboard this spring after 4 years of ownership. I was surprised that it was in pretty good shape minus a ton of barnacle buildup (even in the lower Hudson River). It is pretty rectangular so it should be easy for a metal shop to fabricate. I could not tell if it was epoxied or just a metal that appeared to be at least 1" thick. The information.htm File on T27Owners says that the early models had a bronze centerboard as you already seem to know. I think that it weighs over 100#s. Not sure if this helps.
Alternatively you might be able to get the exact dimensions from Sparkman & Stephens website as Olin Stephens was the designer of this boat. I believe that there is a link to S&S under the Links section.
You can sail the boat without the centerboard but I would recommend you get a new one made as it adds ballast down low and helps the boat tack upwind among many other useful attributes that includes steering under power in tight spots.
Good luck with this. We will try to help out as we can.

Caleb
#328 Odalisque

-----Original Message-----
From: kc7zik@...
To: T27Owners@...
Sent: Tue, 15 May 2007 5:25 PM
Subject: [T27Owners] Centerboard replacement

Hello,

I need help in locating a drawing of centerboard for T27 hull#54. I
want to recast a new one out of bronze. My wife and I purchased her
last summer and are starting to work on things now.

Thanks for any help
Dudley



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I Have Hull #220, and I too am replacing my centerboard,?my original CB?has de lamination
problems.
?
I am having a local metal fabricator make one out of 316 stainless (1/4")?at a cost of $800.
?
I do have the CB photo layed out on a 1" grid, i will scan it and post it tomorrow. I also traced my CB and would be willing to mail the tracing to anyone who needs it.

Steve Cook
?
508-736-4404


To: T27Owners@...
CC: MKSTROUP@...
From: calebjess@...
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 19:42:31 -0400
Subject: Re: [T27Owners] Centerboard replacement

Dudley,
At the old tratan27owners.com someone with a user name of CStroup
posted a photo of the centerboard aligned over a 1" grid. I am
attempting to contact him to see if he can find this picture.
Alternatively Ken may be able to find this photo but I would not be too
hopeful of that as it was embedded in the Projects section of the old
forum which has not been recovered.
Tartanparts.com will graciously sell you a replacement for $1200 that
takes 4-6 weeks for delivery. You might be able to talk to them and
see if they will 'give' you the exact dimensions. I am going out on a
limb here but I bet that you could get this made by a local metal
working shop for well less than half of what they want. I can only
assume that your old C/B is gone to the bottom of the ocean so you
can't get the dimensions from it.
On a related note I was finally able to paint our centerboard this
spring after 4 years of ownership. I was surprised that it was in
pretty good shape minus a ton of barnacle buildup (even in the lower
Hudson River). It is pretty rectangular so it should be easy for a
metal shop to fabricate. I could not tell if it was epoxied or just a
metal that appeared to be at least 1" thick. The information.htm File
on T27Owners says that the early models had a bronze centerboard as you
already seem to know. I think that it weighs over 100#s. Not sure if
this helps.
Alternatively you might be able to get the exact dimensions from
Sparkman & Stephens website as Olin Stephens was the designer of this
boat. I believe that there is a link to S&S under the Links section.
You can sail the boat without the centerboard but I would recommend you
get a new one made as it adds ballast down low and helps the boat tack
upwind among many other useful attributes that includes steering under
power in tight spots.
Good luck with this. We will try to help out as we can.

Caleb
#328 Odalisque

-----Original Message-----
From: kc7zik@yahoo.com
To: T27Owners@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, 15 May 2007 5:25 PM
Subject: [T27Owners] Centerboard replacement

Hello,

I need help in locating a drawing of centerboard for T27 hull#54. I
want to recast a new one out of bronze. My wife and I purchased her
last summer and are starting to work on things now.

Thanks for any help
Dudley

__________________________________________________________
AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free
from AOL at AOL.com.



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-----Original Message-----
From: cooksm@...
To: t27owners@...
Cc: mkstroup@...
Sent: Tue, 15 May 2007 9:00 PM
Subject: RE: [T27Owners] Centerboard replacement

I Have Hull #220, and I too am replacing my centerboard,?my
original CB?has de lamination
problems.
?
I am having a local metal fabricator make one out of 316 stainless
(1/4")?at a cost of $800.
?
I do have the CB photo layed out on a 1" grid, i will scan it and post
it tomorrow. I also traced my CB and would be willing to mail the
tracing to anyone who needs it.

Steve Cook
?
508-736-4404

--------
To: T27Owners@...
CC: MKSTROUP@...
From: calebjess@...
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 19:42:31 -0400
Subject: Re: [T27Owners] Centerboard replacement

Dudley,
At the old tratan27owners.com someone with a user name of CStroup
posted a photo of the centerboard aligned over a 1" grid. I am
attempting to contact him to see if he can find this picture.
Alternatively Ken may be able to find this photo but I would not be too
hopeful of that as it was embedded in the Projects section of the old
forum which has not been recovered.
Tartanparts.com will graciously sell you a replacement for $1200 that
takes 4-6 weeks for delivery. You might be able to talk to them and
see if they will 'give' you the exact dimensions. I am going out on a
limb here but I bet that you could get this made by a local metal
working shop for well less than half of what they want. I can only
assume that your old C/B is gone to the bottom of the ocean so you
can't get the dimensions from it.
On a related note I was finally able to paint our centerboard this
spring after 4 years of ownership. I was surprised that it was in
pretty good shape minus a ton of barnacle buildup (even in the lower
Hudson River). It is pretty rectangular so it should be easy for a
metal shop to fabricate. I could not tell if it was epoxied or just a
metal that appeared to be at least 1" thick. The information.htm File
on T27Owners says that the early models had a bronze centerboard as you
already seem to know. I think that it weighs over 100#s. Not sure if
this helps.
Alternatively you might be able to get the exact dimensions from
Sparkman & Stephens website as Olin Stephens was the designer of this
boat. I believe that there is a link to S&S under the Links section.
You can sail the boat without the centerboard but I would recommend you
get a new one made as it adds ballast down low and helps the boat tack
upwind among many other useful attributes that includes steering under
power in tight spots.
Good luck with this. We will try to help out as we can.

Caleb
#328 Odalisque

-----Original Message-----
From: kc7zik@...
To: T27Owners@...
Sent: Tue, 15 May 2007 5:25 PM
Subject: [T27Owners] Centerboard replacement

Hello,

I need help in locating a drawing of centerboard for T27 hull#54. I
want to recast a new one out of bronze. My wife and I purchased her
last summer and are starting to work on things now.

Thanks for any help
Dudley

__________________________________________________________
AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free
from AOL at AOL.com.





--------
Download Messenger. Start an i conversation. Support a cause. Join Now!


________________________________________________________________________
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from AOL at AOL.com.
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Attached is photo of the presumably original centerboard from our 1978 T27-2. Pivot hole?at left, pennant hole at top middle. The cutaway sections were made to check on internal corrosion, of which there was?plenty. The board was also badly delaminated near the corrosion. We?bought a?new centerboard from the factory, which is not yet installed.
?
The dashed line on the cb indicates approximate location of the steel plate, as determined by sliding a strong magnet over the board. Note that there is no steel plate at the left end, which is basically the part of the board which stays in the centerboard trunk. My guess is the reason for no steel in that area?is in the event of a very hard sideways grounding, it would be preferable to break the board rather than the hull and/or the centerboard trunk. Might be worth checking with the Tartan factory on this.
?
There is a brass or bronze disk embedded in the board?at the pivot hole.?
?
If needed, I can supply more details on?this cb and/or the new one.
?
Jack Wyman
T27-2
Hull #667
"Seakindly"
Manchester, Michigan


 

Thanks for the photo Jack. I had not realized that our centerboard was
designed to be a break away component. It makes perfect sense though
as if the centerboard breaks before the trunk does than the boat will
most likely still float whereas if the trunk broke below the waterline,
well, can you say bucket brigade or abandon ship? Some of this helps
explain the rather expensive replacement cost ($1200) at
tartanparts.com. This is also making me think that using a sheet of
1/4" (#316) stainless cut to the full dimensions is not such a bad
idea. Even if it is covered in epoxy and cloth it might bend (but not
break) in a hard sideways grounding situation. This also makes me
wonder if a centerboard made completely of bronze could be vulnerable
to a catastrophic leak in a hard sideways grounding situation or might
be too heavy for the existing hardware.
Granted, my T27 does not usually sail sideways (a little when close
hauled) but it is interesting to note that the designers (S&S) took the
time to consider this possibility however remote. Clever buggers! In
bad weather with lumpy seas it is more of a possibility than the kind
of weather I usually like to sail in. The few centerboard groundings I
have experience with involved low speeds and winds and a muddy river
bottom. I think that our board is light enough that it can be pushed
up by obstructions below which add to its functionality as a depth
meter. I wonder if you know the weight of your deteriorated
centerboard?
I think that what people who want to fabricate their own centerboards
need is the overall dimensions of the board itself. I remember seeing
a photo of the board which was aligned on a large piece of paper that
had a grid of 1" squares on it so you could count off the inches of all
the dimensions.
Thanks for your input.
Caleb
#328 Odalisque, 1967 - Douglas & McLeod builders

-----Original Message-----
From: jackwyman@...
To: T27Owners@...
Cc: jackwyman@...
Sent: Wed, 16 May 2007 9:52 PM
Subject: [T27Owners] Re: Centerboard replacement

Attached is photo of the presumably original centerboard from
our 1978 T27-2. Pivot hole?at left, pennant hole at top middle. The
cutaway sections were made to check on internal corrosion, of which
there was?plenty. The board was also badly delaminated near the
corrosion. We?bought a?new centerboard from the factory, which is not
yet installed.
?
The dashed line on the cb indicates approximate location of the steel
plate, as determined by sliding a strong magnet over the board. Note
that there is no steel plate at the left end, which is basically the
part of the board which stays in the centerboard trunk. My guess is the
reason for no steel in that area?is in the event of a very hard
sideways grounding, it would be preferable to break the board rather
than the hull and/or the centerboard trunk. Might be worth checking
with the Tartan factory on this.
?
There is a brass or bronze disk embedded in the board?at the pivot
hole.?
?
If needed, I can supply more details on?this cb and/or the new one.
?
Jack Wyman
T27-2
Hull #667
"Seakindly"
Manchester, Michigan


[Image Removed]


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I'm not sure if the centerboard was designed for quick breakaway. It
was just a guess. Thinking more about why there is no steel in the top
of the board, it might also be because the weight does a lot more good
if it's down further. The weight is there only to get the board down
in the first place, and then to keep it down even at hull speed.
Having weight near the pivot point doesn't contribute much. The board
weighs only a little over 100 pounds, so it contributes very little in
the way of ballast.

When we ordered the new cb, they needed the distance on our old board
from pivot to pennant holes. So even though they knew our model and
hull numbers, apparently there were differences among boats.

Jack Wyman
T27-2
Hull #667
"Seakindly"

--- In T27Owners@..., calebjess@... wrote:

Thanks for the photo Jack. I had not realized that our centerboard was
designed to be a break away component. It makes perfect sense though
as if the centerboard breaks before the trunk does than the boat will
most likely still float whereas if the trunk broke below the waterline,
well, can you say bucket brigade or abandon ship? Some of this helps
explain the rather expensive replacement cost ($1200) at
tartanparts.com. This is also making me think that using a sheet of
1/4" (#316) stainless cut to the full dimensions is not such a bad
idea. Even if it is covered in epoxy and cloth it might bend (but not
break) in a hard sideways grounding situation. This also makes me
wonder if a centerboard made completely of bronze could be vulnerable
to a catastrophic leak in a hard sideways grounding situation or might
be too heavy for the existing hardware.
Granted, my T27 does not usually sail sideways (a little when close
hauled) but it is interesting to note that the designers (S&S) took the
time to consider this possibility however remote. Clever buggers! In
bad weather with lumpy seas it is more of a possibility than the kind
of weather I usually like to sail in. The few centerboard groundings I
have experience with involved low speeds and winds and a muddy river
bottom. I think that our board is light enough that it can be pushed
up by obstructions below which add to its functionality as a depth
meter. I wonder if you know the weight of your deteriorated
centerboard?
I think that what people who want to fabricate their own centerboards
need is the overall dimensions of the board itself. I remember seeing
a photo of the board which was aligned on a large piece of paper that
had a grid of 1" squares on it so you could count off the inches of all
the dimensions.
Thanks for your input.
Caleb
#328 Odalisque, 1967 - Douglas & McLeod builders

-----Original Message-----
From: jackwyman@...
To: T27Owners@...
Cc: jackwyman@...
Sent: Wed, 16 May 2007 9:52 PM
Subject: [T27Owners] Re: Centerboard replacement

Attached is photo of the presumably original centerboard from
our 1978 T27-2. Pivot hole? at left, pennant hole at top middle. The
cutaway sections were made to check on internal corrosion, of which
there was? plenty. The board was also badly delaminated near the
corrosion. We? bought a? new centerboard from the factory, which is not
yet installed.
?
The dashed line on the cb indicates approximate location of the steel
plate, as determined by sliding a strong magnet over the board. Note
that there is no steel plate at the left end, which is basically the
part of the board which stays in the centerboard trunk. My guess is the
reason for no steel in that area? is in the event of a very hard
sideways grounding, it would be preferable to break the board rather
than the hull and/or the centerboard trunk. Might be worth checking
with the Tartan factory on this.
?
There is a brass or bronze disk embedded in the board? at the pivot
hole.?
?
If needed, I can supply more details on? this cb and/or the new one.
?
Jack Wyman
T27-2
Hull #667
"Seakindly"
Manchester, Michigan


[Image Removed]


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from AOL at AOL.com.
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mp_leahy
 

--- In T27Owners@..., "Jack Wyman" <jackwyman@...> wrote:
I am contemplating a centerboard rebuild. The steel has rusted and
bulged the board. Would you update your experience for me? I like the
idea of a factory board if they are made or a bronze replacement if
practical. thanks
Attached is photo of the presumably original centerboard from our
1978 T27-2. Pivot hole at left, pennant hole at top middle. The
cutaway sections were made to check on internal corrosion, of which
there was plenty. The board was also badly delaminated near the
corrosion. We bought a new centerboard from the factory, which is not
yet installed.

The dashed line on the cb indicates approximate location of the
steel plate, as determined by sliding a strong magnet over the board.
Note that there is no steel plate at the left end, which is basically
the part of the board which stays in the centerboard trunk. My guess
is the reason for no steel in that area is in the event of a very
hard sideways grounding, it would be preferable to break the board
rather than the hull and/or the centerboard trunk. Might be worth
checking with the Tartan factory on this.

There is a brass or bronze disk embedded in the board at the pivot
hole.

If needed, I can supply more details on this cb and/or the new one.

Jack Wyman
T27-2
Hull #667
"Seakindly"
Manchester, Michigan