Project BlueSphere

Land and Sea

Restoration

chain  I was thinking it would take me an hour to unbolt these two chain plates, pull them, grind down the base, re-bolt them, and re-5200 (seal) them. Ha, That was day before yesterday. I do have stainless covers that fit over them and screw to the deck but they are purely cosmetic.

I ended up re-pulling them again after this picture, mixing up fairing compound and sanding. They are still out of the boat. And I have 10 more chain plates to go :(

The chain plates are in good order however one of the bolts snapped as it had been wet for a few years. This is exactly why I don’t like threw-deck chain plates. I also have a sneaking suspicion the rigger used the old Taiwanese bolts when he put in the new chain plates in about 10 years ago.

After all this work I’ll keep these chain plates for a while. I have 12 of them. I’ll change over to hull strapped ones when its time (three years or so) to pull and inspect these again.

As you can see from the picture the gap in-between the chain plates and the deck needs to be sealed. The chain plates flex allot and this seal is easily broken allowing water (salt) to penetrate the deck and corrode the hidden chain plates and bolts below. They are usually hidden deep in a locker and most people (myself included) tend to forget about them, out of sight out of mind. This is why a lot of rigs come down. I’ve actually seen people re-rig their entire boats and not pull/inspect their chain plates because it was too much of a “pain in the ass”.

Sailboats are really easy things to comprehend if you look at the basics. I get so many emails from people asking me if I think “such & such” is a good cruising boat, or is it a “Blue Water” boat? the truth is the term “blue water” should apply to the attitude of the captain and not the boat. People have rowed across the sea and have cruised on boats made from plastic bottles and rubbish. You can take a new million-dollar cruising boat with bad chain plates, or one bad fitting and it isn’t a “blue water” boat.

It’s taken me a few years to learn how to work with metal, fiberglass, rigging, wood, but if you push yourself to restore a boat before you go cruising as opposed to just buying one ready to go, you’ll be a better and more self-sufficient sailor. I meet many “cruisers” who say “I don’t mind paying people to work on my boat as I travel, that’s why I’ve worked so hard in my life”, but that is exactly the kind of attitude, and why people end up needing to be rescued, bailed out, or they end up not enjoying their cruising experience because its too expensive or they are always broke down.

If your dream has been to get a boat and sail off into the sunset you must realize we must be able to take care of ourselves and take responsibility for our ship and the safety of the people aboard, down to every last screw.

I guess if it was easy everyone would do it eah?

Don’t let the old classic boats in your area wither away and die because they have bad paint or are a bit ugly looking. An old ugly boat might just be the key that sets you free? If you dig around some of your local ship yards you can often find boats for free, or next to free. Learn how to restore them, maintain them, and set sail.

I often think of what I would do if I lost Splendid on a reef. I don’t have insurance and I would sit on a beach with nothing but what I had in my backpack. Truthfully I could find another boat for next to nothing and in a few months be sailing again. They say “knowledge is power”, knowledge is also freedom :)

Anyway, back to wrestling with my chain plates!

Cheers from Linton :)

– Alex

Published in Alex Dorsey
Updated: —

14 Comments

  1. Alex,
    If you bevel the sealing surface of the deck instead of leaving it vertical, you can get more sealing surface and it will give you a much better seal and last quite a bit longer. My boat is an ’84 and has original chainplates and probably original bolts, so this job is on the list for this year. Luckily, I only have 6.

    ciao,
    ks

  2. Sailoutbound,

    good idea, will make a bevel with my dremmel.Pull the plates though. Tiwanese stainless is crap, wood, glass work great. As you maintain your boat try to replace every bit you can.

    I lost my spear in the rocks yesterday, really bummed but went out to a really cool island 4 miles from here, lots of fish :)

  3. Woot, I just ordered an Icom 504a VHF (loudhailer & foghorn), and new hardware (blocks/rope clutch) to re-rig my main sheet from Garhauer ( garhauermarine.com/ )

    I dont go anywhere else to buy hardware because these guys manufacture great hardware and sell at great prices! Everything is in house. And no, I don’t get a special deal for saying this :)

    Life is good !

  4. Alex,

    If you can spare the epoxy, built raised blocks around the chainplate exits. Raising them in this way helps keep the water out. Don Casey has some recommendations online.

    Fair winds.

    Ewan

  5. ewan,

    I’m not going to go through the trouble but good suggestion. By the time they start leaking it is my intention to fabracate hull-strapped chain plates and get it done the right way.

  6. I couldn’t agree with you more about boat / attitude and ability of the sailor. I hear so many people with very strict thoughts on what boat is the right boat but very little knowledge..or know how on the maintenance and upkeep of any boat. There IS a lot to be considered about the way a boat was built but much more to be considered about how it was kept SINCE it was built and how you will maintain it from here on.

    Happy boat work, Alex!

    Barry (mshnhed) ma-sheen-hed.

  7. Wow, hemorrhaging money in Panama. New sander, queen mattress, Paints, tools, blah, blah, blah. I’ll go through $700 in supplies (man 5200 is way expensive) this trip but all needed. I want to run away from the land and go to the islands where no money can be spent :)

    I also need to dig up a new spear and some SCUBA bottles.

    I’m really looking forward to feeling comfortable about Splendid being able to move and be dry , no Cheoy Leekie. I may actually make my 9 month goal and be ready to cross the Pacific next March :)

    Back home on Sunday.

  8. alex…just worked 3 12hour days….halibut for dinner, what you can’t make it? mavis will be disapointed….have refrig. stuff in trailer, and will look at it tomorrow…G

  9. Capt. Paul West

    Glad to see you back and healthy Alex. Chain plates… On my list. Mine are buried behind my cabinets and woodwork, so I have to cut holes in everything and build inspection plates over everything. The Endeavor Corp put everything in and built everything over all the wiring, hardware and hoses like it never would need looked at again.

    Just back from a 7 day loop to the Dry Tortugas to Key West and back to Fort Myers. Slept hard last night and am half human right now. BUT, I didn’t break a thing. Go figure how cool was that.

    So stay in touch and thanks for letting me be a sponsor. Keep up the vids and continue to enjoy EVERY precious moment. Pat and I always, and I mean ALWAYS use the phrase, “It’s NOW.” Helps us keep it all in prospective.

  10. Capt. Paul West

    Glad to see you back and healthy Alex. Chain plates… On my list. Mine are buried behind my cabinets and woodwork, so I have to cut holes in everything and build inspection plates over everything. The Endeavor Corp put everything in and built everything over all the wiring, hardware and hoses like it never would need looked at again.

    Just back from a 7 day loop to the Dry Tortugas to Key West and back to Fort Myers. Slept hard last night and am half human right now. BUT, I didn’t break a thing. Go figure how cool was that.

    So stay in touch and thanks for letting me be a sponsor. Keep up the vids and continue to enjoy EVERY precious moment. Pat and I always, and I mean ALWAYS use the phrase, “It’s NOW.” Helps us keep it all in prospective.

  11. Capt. Paul West

    Also, while you are in the “Chain Plate” area, can you shoot some video or photos of your experience. Always looking for thoughts and ideas.

    Thanks…

    Capt. Paul
    s/v Panacea

  12. Paul,

    I will shoot some video. I just won an auction on a flip video camera on ebay a few days ago. I should have it in a week or so. I want to get back to making video again and will document the chain plate issue. The Mac is running well with the new 750GB hard drive and I have premiere installed and ready to go :)

    Man…, I’ve spent a few grand in the last week. I’ve bought new primer, paints, painting supplies, a new makita orbital sander, VHF radio, video camera, hardware for the new main sheet system, Vita mix (draws 44 amps, but blends like a monster :), queen mattress (WOW its comfy), epoxy and fairing supplies, and a lot more stuff. I’m really going to buckle down here and get Splendid painted up and acceptable for chartering (temporary means to an end). Tourism here is really starting to boom and I’m sure I’ll be okay. I also went to the Price Smart (Cosco) and spent a few hundred of good bulk food (nuts, honey, cheese).

    I’m off in a few days to get the final plumbing pieces for my scuba/pneumatic spray gun rig. I’m ultra focused on the tasks at hand. I don’t think I’ll be able to order my refergeration system but I will have what I need to shoot video, work on Splendid, and get my ship together.

    Good luck on your charters

  13. Thanks, Alex. Just what I needed, when I needed it. I am entering my fifth year of restoring a 1975 Cape Dory 28. There are days I wish I’d just bought a Harley. There are other days I wish I’d waited and bought a boat closer to ready. Waiting is just not the right plan. The boat I have, however, is perfect. I will know every inch of her when I’m done. She and I will each be stronger for having met each other.

    Hoping to be in the water in 2012. See you out there soon.

    Peace, Love and Elbow Grease,
    Bubba

  14. Bubba,

    I’d like a harley too but it wont take me where I need to go, Splendid will ;)

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