I know of at least one other 36 owner who tackled the anchor locker bulkhead repair/replacement - Boatmon, aboard his '82, The Lass (view thread here:
viewtopic.php?p=24690#p24690 and his website here
http://albinrestoration.blogspot.com/).
Our repair comes as no surprise; We'd noted the water damage and rot when we purchased Molly. After watching her samson post work back and forth during high surge in the marina, we decided that this winter was the time for the repair. The samson post is far too critical a piece of hardware to ignore, so yesterday I started the job.
Pulling the shelving and trim (for reuse) was probably the most time-consuming part of the job, particularly without damaging the aft main bulkheads in the v-berth. Once those parts were out of the way, I used an oscillating tool to cut away the tabbing, freeing the bulkhead.
A couple observations for those of you who don't want to make this repair on your 36:
1) Molly's anchor locker DOES have a drain, a piece of tube set in a resinous base. It is routed down the stem and into the forward bilge.
2) Her drain sits about 2" HIGHER than the resinous base - i.e., anchor locker floor, meaning that any collected water will drain into the bilge only after it reaches 2" deep. Thus, until it evaporates or soaks into the bulkhead, water will pool in the bottom of the anchor locker. This could have been prevented years ago by cutting the drain tube flush with the resinous base.
3) Checking and renewing regularly the seal between the samson post and the deck will stop any leaks from topsides BEFORE they have a chance to cause damage to the samson post (and core of the foredeck, by the way).
4) NO fiberglass extends from the resinous base up the bulkhead, meaning water is in direct contact with the bulkhead.
5) Not surprisingly, rotted portions of the samson post were areas not easily inspected: at the base in the thickened resin, and where the post passes through the deck.
As far as the anatomy of the bulkhead and samson post:
- The bulkhead was tabbed on both sides, which was better build quality than I'd expected
- The samson post base rests against the stem and is held in place by thickened resin that was packed around the post to form the bottom of the anchor locker.
- The drain tube was set in this thickened resin.
- There was a void area under the thickened resin which could (and probably did) trap some water against the bottom portion of the bulkhead.
I will update as work continues. The plan for now is to grind down the remaining tabbing, remove the samson post, pattern a new bulkhead, make a new samson post, and reinstall all the pieces.
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