Hi Folks, my 1979 P30, Early Bird, shows a fair amount of play inside the rudder. I've drilled a few small holes to drain water, want to fill the void with some sort of epoxy from the top. Suggestions please? Thanks!
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I would carefully split/saw the rudder in half longitudinally, inspect the shaft and fingers, refill the halves with epoxy and collodial silica.
Skylark, a 1973 P36-1 has what I believe to be a bronze rudder shaft and that leads me to believe that the fingers are also bronze to be welded to the shaft.
My 1970 P26 had an aluminum shaft that suffered from anaerobic corrosion where the shaft met the rudder and the shaft rested against the lower Delrin bushing, starving the water from oxygen. The rudder just fell off one day and I had to order a new rudder of stainless steel.
Good luck,
George/Skylark
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It's hard to comment without examining the rudder but from your description I would consider pinning the rudder shaft as you do this epoxy fill.
I would drill a hole all the way through the rudder right through the middle of the shaft and pin it with a fiberglass rod. 1/2 or 5/8". use fiberglass because the epoxy will bond well to it. do this in two places, maybe 3" down and 12" down?
Do this when you do epoxy fill in one operation.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Slow speed, use oil, start small and work up to final diameter. Use sharp high quality HSS bits.
If you push to hard in stainless it can work harden and the bit will break and you'll need a Cobalt bit. so take you're time and use oil. then clean all the oil out so the epoxy will stick.
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Slow speed, use oil, start small and work up to final diameter. Use sharp high quality HSS bits.
If you push too hard in stainless it can work harden and the bit will break and you'll need a Cobalt bit. so take you're time and use oil. then clean all the oil out so the epoxy will stick.
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George/SkylarkWorth repeating, slow speed and cutting oil. And pressure while drilling slowly.
Thinking a bit more about this it might be best to use a water based cooling fluid so it's easier to clean out after and then get better bonding of the epoxy.
Also, you'll need to prep the surface of the fiberglass rod to 80 grit for best adhesion.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Not sure. Probabaly not? My guess is they did the layup in two haves but they were joined together in the initial cure cycle so what there is of a seam has primary bonds. One side is layed up in the mold, the stock is placed, the other side is layed up in the other half of the mold, the two are brought together and somewhere in that process the rest of the volume was filled by resin-rich chopper gun. That would make for primary bonds throughout. But that's just a guess...Probably need a seance to find out for sure.
Dan Pfeiffer
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Very heavy.
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Not sure. Probabaly not? My guess is they did the layup in two haves but they were joined together in the initial cure cycle so what there is of a seam has primary bonds. One side is layed up in the mold, the stock is placed, the other side is layed up
in the other half of the mold, the two are brought together and somewhere in that process the rest of the volume was filled by resin-rich chopper gun. That would make for primary bonds throughout. But that's just a guess...Probably need a seance to find
out for sure.
Dan Pfeiffer
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