Carl Thunberg wrote:Face it, Dean. Loda May is hopelessly broken. You need to sell her to me. I'll take this problem off your hands. Just trying to be helpful . . .
In your dreams, Thunberg.
tartansailor wrote:It's wood. Wood expands with high humidity. If you can somehow encase it and feed hot air via a hair dryer overnight, it just might work.
Call it a Hail Mary attempt. Then sand the cheeks down a bit.
Wrong forum thread, maybe? ???
John Stone wrote:I assure you the foot lock is through-bolted. It has tremendous loads on it since the sheet turns 180° as it passes through the block.
Does it look like the one in the pictures I posted below? If so, just take the center bolt out. It’s threaded into a button welded to the under side of the flange base. If it’s a differnt block, can you post a picture and we might be able to give you better idea how to fix it.
Awesome to see that pic, John. Thanks! That's my guy alright. I really wanted to know where/how that center bolt is attached. However, I tried
like hell to loosen that bolt, to no avail. The low profile of the head made it extremely difficult to keep a wrench on it. Since I have determined that the sheave is stuck to that bolt, I fear that even if I were able to turn it, it and the sheave will only move up a bit before the sheave hits the upper cheek, than game over. Again.
And even if I could get that bolt out, then the question becomes "what now?" Is finding a sheave like the any easier than finding the whole block?
Which launches the question: does anyone know where I am likely to find that ancient Schaefer block. Efforts so far have no borne fruit. My sense is that finding/replacing the whole block is the way to go.
Right now, I think I am going to have the yard cut a hole in the propane locker. It will be christened as an "inspection port." After the job is done, we will put on a cover with sealant, to keep the propane locker fume-tight.