T and J Racing
Member
My lovely and longsuffering wife decided to surprise me for Christmas this year with a new set of sails for our trusty little Wasabi, through Dave at Bellingham Sails and Repair. Since we'd put quite a lot of miles on Wasabi in the last 3 years, I figured it was time for a more critical look at things. I'm sure everyone reading this knows how the next bit went on a 45 year old boat. Since I'd picked up a thing or two during my stint at the boatyard a few years back, I thought this would be a great opportunity to get some work done that would simply not be worth paying someone else to do. I don't have $500k yacht finish carpentry skills, but San Juan 24? All day and twice on Sunday.
Some of the problems:
Now that I've learned a bit about what I'm looking at, this is a bit of a mess:
The keel stringers had rotted and detached from the bilge, allowing a bit of keel wiggle:
The port chainplate was totally glassed over, making inspection impossible:
And the starboard chainplate gusset/cabinet side was wet and soft:
Some of the problems:
Now that I've learned a bit about what I'm looking at, this is a bit of a mess:

The keel stringers had rotted and detached from the bilge, allowing a bit of keel wiggle:


The port chainplate was totally glassed over, making inspection impossible:

And the starboard chainplate gusset/cabinet side was wet and soft:

