Your rigging falls.Neil Gordon wrote:>> I wire brushed it, painted it with rustoleum and decided it was never sink the boat. <<
So what happens if it fails?
In about 2009 when I was fabricating and installing a new bowsprit on Mystic Rose, I discovered that the bow plate was severely corroded and didn't have a lot of structural strength left. After attempting to remove it for many hours to no avail. I finally set out to come up with another solution.
Since the bowplate holds the foredeck and the bowsprit down, and gets its strength from being attached to the front of the bow by embedding a rebar into the fiberglass, the solution seemed simple enough.
I left the bowplate in place, treated it with Oshpo and sealed it up in roofing sealant. Then I obtained a 1/2"SS threaded rod about three ft long (16,000 lb tensile strength), drilled 1/2" hole in the bow on the center line below the rebar and 1/2" hole in the new bowsprit just forward of the windlass. Bend the rod about 30 degrees and thread it down thru the bowsprit into the locker and then thru the front of the bow. Secure the bottom with a large washer and double nut, secure the top with a 1/2" alum plate on top of the bowsprit and double nut. You can tighten this arrangement as much as you like.. file the ends round and it looks pleasing. Very strong and no more worrying about the rusting bowplate, or your rigging pulling your bowsprit up.
Darrell