by SUNBIRD » Sun Sep 19, 2010 12:01 am
The holes between cuddy and cockpit were factory original to allow any water that gets in the cuddy to drain out.
Possible leak points that I've found on my boat (1979)
Hull-Deck joint, I sealed any gaps (and some were wide) with a good marine sealant, this cut down on the water getting into the bilge while sailing! The original putty/filler had chipped out in places.
I had cracks in the place where the cockpit molding and inside cuddy molding meet around those cuddy drain holes.
The inspection /bailing ports in the cockpit sole, the originals on my boat were broken and hard to remove. I replaced them with new ones (Beckson 4") purchased from D&R Marine. Be sure to seal the flanges to the deck. D&R seems to fill internet orders and phone orders pretty well, if you live near Assonet. MA then your best bet is a Saturday morning visit to Rudy.
The bilge drainplug in the transom, may need to seal the flange to the hull. Oh ,and the water REALLY pours in there if you forget the plug! I did forget once........thank goodness I noticed before leaving the dock at the ramp! Eve nmore thankful that the plug was in the cockpit where I'd left it all winter (I now make REAL sure to screw it in the day that I paint the bottom!). My boat stays on a mooring for the summer and as long as we don't get any major rain during the week.... the bilge usually stay bone dry.
If centerboard is sticking, is it mostly i nthe full up position that it sticks? if so, I'd recommend grinding/sanding the upper,forward corner a bit to round the edges. the CB is squared off in hte area but the inside of the trunk is rounded. My CB kept sticking and it worked fine after rounding the top off a bit.
Rod Johnson, "SUNBIRD"
1979 DS II, # 10201