Cold Aft Kansas

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One Way David
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Boat Type: Pearson Ensign
Location: Kansas

Cold Aft Kansas

Post by One Way David »

Ok I don't live in the great north east, I can still feel the pain. See, I live in cold aft Kansas;)

Image

And, yes that is a Border Collie that works for a living in the lower left. Can anybody name that boat? Actually I have a question and a comment. The following questions regard the rudder and the urgency of the obvious need for repair. I could put her in the water next week, or should I pull the rudder and rebuild?

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My comment. I want to thank Tim and the whole group of regulars and occasionals for this site. I feel like I have the benefit of a university available for my education. I've been lurking for about a year and have really enjoyed it. Thanks.
Never finish all your projects or you'll be bored.
bcooke
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Post by bcooke »

Go sailing next week.

The wood has dried out a bit and shrunk. A few days in the water and it will swell back up.

Take a long oar with you in case I am wrong...
-Britton
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Most everything you read on the Internet is wrong.

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Rachel
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Post by Rachel »

Pearson Ensign?
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Tim
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Post by Tim »

There's nothing urgent or in need of repair on that rudder, unless the wood is punky.

Those gaps will disappear when the boat is put back in the water. What you have there is entirely normal, and even on the minimal side of normal plank shrinkage.
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Hirilondë
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Post by Hirilondë »

bcooke wrote: Take a long oar with you in case I am wrong...
Now that is how one instills confidence in a reply!
Dave Finnegan
builder of Spindrift 9N #521 'Wingë'
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Gresham’s Law of information: Bad information drives out good. No matter how long ago a correction for a particular error may have appeared in print or online, it never seems to catch up with the ever-widening distribution of the error.
bcooke
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Post by bcooke »

I try to cover my aft at all times :-)
-Britton
Work is overrated.

Most everything you read on the Internet is wrong.

The Website
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Ric in Richmond
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Post by Ric in Richmond »

DON'T fill those gaps with caulk either.

Rudder is fine.
Ric Bergstrom

http://andiamoadventures.blogspot.com/

Archived old blog:

http://andiamo35.blogspot.com/

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One Way David
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Post by One Way David »

Thanks everyone. Sailing it will be.
Never finish all your projects or you'll be bored.
Case
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Post by Case »

I had to chuckle when I read the first post.

Its understandable, though. I never can get used to wooden rudders on a fiberglass boat. Pearson sure was a bit strange sticking to wooden rudders while building fiberglass boats in the first few years of operation. Pearson probably did it because at that time, wooden boats were still common so it probably was quicker & cheaper to build wooden rudders.

That wood rudder actually looks better than average for me. I often see wood rudders with gaps maybe 3 times bigger.


- Case
One Way David
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Post by One Way David »

Oh yeah, it's an Ensign. But you already knew that.
Never finish all your projects or you'll be bored.
dmairspotter
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Post by dmairspotter »

One of the prettiest boats ever designed, IMO!

My rudder looked like that for years.
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Rachel
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Post by Rachel »

One Way David wrote:Oh yeah, it's an Ensign. But you already knew that.
I didn't know - just guessed based on the "aft" - so thanks for telling.

Rachel
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