kcassells
Fleet Admiral
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2012
- Messages
- 8,715
Hey @docmirror that post from me was for someone else. Sorry about the confusion.
I can’t picture this in my head…..so the wood core is rotted and gone and your sandwiching steel plates to the stringer? Then glassing it all together with the rotted core inside? Maybe I misunderstood…….Bad to worse news. While cutting out the rear crossbrace we've found the front of the engine stringers are compromised. I checked the transom very well before buying it, but there was no way for me to check the engine stringers under the exh stacks. They look great from the outside with the 24Oz roving material but the wood inside is history.
We have a relatively easy solution. I'm going to cut long steel plates about 3" x 16" and we will sandwich the existing formed FG. They he is going to lay several layers of new roving on the steel and I will set the engine mount on the new steel with new bolts. This will transfer most of the weight down to the hull along side the engine stringer. The new FG is supposed to keep it all locked in place.
I'm going down to pull the engine on Wed, and I'll cut the steel then too. Let him have at the stringers without obstruction and glass in the steel plates.
Oof, time to bite the bullet and do a full gut of the wood structure instead of trying to apply band-aids.
I’ve seen others cut the tops off the stringers, dig out the core then fill the center with SeaCast. Once filled, cap with glass. I showed my buddy this method when his motor fell through one of the rotted mounts on his Rinker. It worked extremely well.Sweating like a pig(BTW, pigs don't have sweat glands), out there still. Disconnected all the bellhousing stuff, and still couldn't move the engine. I had to take the snorkel clamp off the front of the jet pump drive and pull the whole thing out as one. There was one small bolt down at the lower starter port that was holding things together but I couldn't really see it until it was up in the air. Now I have the bellhousing separated, and the engine is about 3 inches too tall to go over the transom rail in back.
I will remove the starter ring, and the oil pan and I can scrape by and get it out of there. I already have the nose jacked up as much as I can. I might just rebuild the engine while it's out. Been looking at some specs for 470HP stroker 514Cu-In engine I can make from my block. With that HP I could swap to a steeper pitch impeller called a "B" curve. For my hull with not too much weight that would get about 70MPH at full throttle 5400RPM. Plenty fast for me. See in pic 3 how close I am when I ran out of lift on the cherry picker. I have the boom nearly at the end, so I"ll have the scrape it over with some help and a old blanket over the rail.
Y'all have convinced me, and more important the FG man! Well done. He's going to chop the top, gut the crud out of there and put in some Walnut or Maple then re-glass over, and he's putting in the holes for the bolts with some kind of bolt cylinder that can be sealed around. I didn't get all the details, but the whole engine support will be redone. All I need are the 1/4 in plate stiffeners and I have 2 of 4 cut already to go in. The pan and oil pump was pulled off today, and I got the engine over the transom. Which brings up the next subject...I’ve seen others cut the tops off the stringers, dig out the core then fill the center with SeaCast. Once filled, cap with glass. I showed my buddy this method when his motor fell through one of the rotted mounts on his Rinker. It worked extremely well.
Y'all have convinced me, and more important the FG man! Well done. He's going to chop the top, gut the crud out of there and put in some Walnut or Maple then re-glass over, and he's putting in the holes for the bolts with some kind of bolt cylinder that can be sealed around. I didn't get all the details, but the whole engine support will be redone. All I need are the 1/4 in plate stiffeners and I have 2 of 4 cut already to go in. The pan and oil pump was pulled off today, and I got the engine over the transom. Which brings up the next subject...
LolOhh where's your sense of adventure?
Loose the sunpad, toss a massive supercharger up through there along with a bunch of exhaust pipes. Let the other boaters know you don't give a darn about their tree hugging by announcing your presence on the lake with loads of V8 goodness