Pecco 11 Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 So, I owned a cavalier 32 for 6 years now. Researching the cav 32 keel bolts on the web always turned into a depressing affair. The answer was always J rod/bolts in the keel... meaning the thought of having a look in there always gave me nightmares. Making it short, I got the boat on the hard for other projects and noticed a slight dampness at the keel and hull joint. obviously I could not turn a blind eye and started digging around. To my biggest surprise I actually found the 5 slots in the keel where to undo the bottom bolt. Now, I ll probably will have to change this bolts and that's not an easy one but, at list there is a way. So, if you have a cav 32 and had been led to believe you have J bolts, it may not be true...it s a good thing! I ve been trying to find what apear to be M20 bronze threaded rod. Is that the go? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Black Panther 1,701 Posted February 27 Share Posted February 27 Years ago a cav32 was run into a rock at just over 7kn. The front of the keel was mulched but the bolts the hull and the join were unaffected. A bit of work with a plane and some bog and away she went. Still sailing around today. The factory painted the tops inside the hull with epoxy, it kept the nuts from turning. That thin epoxy skin hadn't cracked. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Pecco 11 Posted February 27 Author Share Posted February 27 Right, That epoxy is still on 3 of the 5 bolts. It looks like at some point someone changed the aft 2 with stainless. The two middle of keel are still original and are almost at the bottom of the keel, definitely strong! I did find a bit of water in those bottom slots hence my will to explore..... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Frank 157 Posted February 29 Share Posted February 29 If the Bronze rods are Aluminium Bronze then they should be as good as new , probably true for Phosphor Bronze as well, also I have heard of Hard Drawn Copper being used occasionally . For SS bolts I would want to see the condition at the hull/keel junction to ensure there is no crevice corrosion or pitting. The installation sounds like its substantially over engineered which was often the case for boats of that era, a good thing of course Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Guest 113 Posted February 29 Share Posted February 29 Changed my galv bolts out for 2205 ss in 2010. A couple of the galv were wasted. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
waikiore 451 Posted February 29 Share Posted February 29 The Aluminium Bronze and Monel bolts that were used here in the 70's -early eighties are way superior to most of what is available today. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Chewing Gum 17 Posted March 29 Share Posted March 29 Cav keels were drilled holes for the bolts with slots melted out with gas axe for bottom nuts and washers. Pretty sure bolts are monel and very unlikely to fail. Peter Smith at Rocna can confirm and would be worth contacting. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Pecco 11 Posted March 30 Author Share Posted March 30 Unfortunately, I am no expert and when I looked at them, it looked like stainless. I have never seen money before so, I wouldn't know. What I know is they looked good. Water ingress was only shy of them so, it was all revealed in time... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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