electricmonk
New Member
Hi all,
I was hoping to seek some advice on repairing the daggerboard case on my fibreglass Skipper dinghy.
The other day I pumped theatrical smoke into the hull through an inspection port to try and find any leaks because it was taking on a bit of water. The hull was nice and warm from the sun so the smoke wouldn't simply pool in the bottom. Anyway, wisps of smoke soon started coming out of the daggerboard case. I think people use this trick to find vacuum leaks in engines. When I took a closer look, I discovered that the inside of the daggerboard case is lined with a wooden box made of some kind of hardwood. Is this normal for a fibreglass boat? I assume it is so that the daggerboard can bump up against wood rather than fibreglass when it's shoved into the slot.
The wood in there is a bit rotten, which I think happened when the boat was stored with water in the hull by the previous owner for a considerable length of time. So I feel like eventually I'll have to replace it which seems like a tedious and fiddly task, involving removing the old wood, cleaning up the surfaces and lowering in and clamping new wooden planks while only being able to access the area through the upper and lower slots. I suppose I'll also have to replace the plastic slot gasket to help keep the water out.
The leak is actually coming from the corner of the wooden box, however. The corner of the box has simply come apart towards the upper section, so when the daggerboard case fills with water it leaks over the top and flows into the hull. Any suggestions for filling this gap so I can have fun sailing for the duration of the season before doing a proper job over winter? I feel like squirting in some sort of sealant along the length of the edge join with a long tube might be the go.
The leak is in the bottom left corner in the photo, mostly at the upper end slightly outside the frame of the picture...

I was hoping to seek some advice on repairing the daggerboard case on my fibreglass Skipper dinghy.
The other day I pumped theatrical smoke into the hull through an inspection port to try and find any leaks because it was taking on a bit of water. The hull was nice and warm from the sun so the smoke wouldn't simply pool in the bottom. Anyway, wisps of smoke soon started coming out of the daggerboard case. I think people use this trick to find vacuum leaks in engines. When I took a closer look, I discovered that the inside of the daggerboard case is lined with a wooden box made of some kind of hardwood. Is this normal for a fibreglass boat? I assume it is so that the daggerboard can bump up against wood rather than fibreglass when it's shoved into the slot.
The wood in there is a bit rotten, which I think happened when the boat was stored with water in the hull by the previous owner for a considerable length of time. So I feel like eventually I'll have to replace it which seems like a tedious and fiddly task, involving removing the old wood, cleaning up the surfaces and lowering in and clamping new wooden planks while only being able to access the area through the upper and lower slots. I suppose I'll also have to replace the plastic slot gasket to help keep the water out.
The leak is actually coming from the corner of the wooden box, however. The corner of the box has simply come apart towards the upper section, so when the daggerboard case fills with water it leaks over the top and flows into the hull. Any suggestions for filling this gap so I can have fun sailing for the duration of the season before doing a proper job over winter? I feel like squirting in some sort of sealant along the length of the edge join with a long tube might be the go.
The leak is in the bottom left corner in the photo, mostly at the upper end slightly outside the frame of the picture...





