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Click on image at left to see the counter timber and the
numbered frames. The red outlines are the areas of rot, soft, or missing
wood. At the right, and below, there are some pictures of frame 40 and
the part of the very long counter timber that has the cutlass bearing
in it. It is punky in the end grain at about 1" depth. |
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Click on each picture to see a much larger view of it. Refer
back to the first "drawing" image upper left for reference location
of frame numbers discussed. |
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At right, there are several pictures of the counter timber
and the sternpost. We are not so worried about the cut-out here at the
sternpost/countertimber interface. It was a small area of rot that was
cut out further by a curious yardworker. The cut was mostly in the sternpost
not the counter timber. |
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The photos show the gribble hole just in front of the rudder
shaft. At the deepest it is about 1 7/8" deep. There is a smaller
"crack" that extends up behind the rudder shaft 3 or 4 inches
at the area just aft of the shaft. It is more shallow further aft but
remains a crack for about 10". These are clear from the photos below.
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The cross section of the countertimber at the point where the rudder
shaft goes thru it is:
9 7/8" across the top, 7" deep and with rabbets cut into
the bottom sides for the blanking, its bottom face is 7 3/4" wide.
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To the left, there are images of the port side of the counter
timber and stern post. |
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To the left, there are images of the frames looking back
from the engine area (frame 39 looking back) and just behind frame 45
at the transom. |
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Above and at left, the soft areas around the rudder shaft
are highlighted. There is about 3/4" of solid wood along the entire
starboard side and a bit more than 1" solid along the port side of
the metal tube. The countertimber is 9 7/8" wide at this point. |
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Below, and right, the countertimber is in generally good
condition between all the frames as seen. |
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