joshuapeacock
New Member
Hi. Am looking for some reassurance here. Or perhaps some home truths. I am moored up on Itchenor reach in Chichester Harbour in 2.8m of water LAT. After taking my old 20 ft Blackwater sloop out in some firm weather I returned to my mooring. I left her for a few weeks and on my return found that the rudder had slipped off the metal shaft that held it. Upon inspection the lower pin had obviously worked loose and upon working free of the hull had slipped off under the weight of the rudder. It is only a wonder that this did not happen under sail, instead slipping off at the mooring.
The question is, can I retrieve the rudder from the area directly beneath the transom, or will the strong currents at Chichester have taken the rudder off down channel? The rudder is a good size, over a metre in length and sturdy.
What I am planning to do is to take the echo sounder out (not yet installed in the boat), to scan the area. I am hoping that I might get some clues from this. If not, I have a plum line that I can drop at low tide to hopefully contact with something solid, and again at low water follow the line by hand to secure the rudder and lift back to the surface.
I have not yet used the echo sounder or had it working, but it does have a fish finder, so I am hoping that it can source the rudder.
Cheers
Josh
The question is, can I retrieve the rudder from the area directly beneath the transom, or will the strong currents at Chichester have taken the rudder off down channel? The rudder is a good size, over a metre in length and sturdy.
What I am planning to do is to take the echo sounder out (not yet installed in the boat), to scan the area. I am hoping that I might get some clues from this. If not, I have a plum line that I can drop at low tide to hopefully contact with something solid, and again at low water follow the line by hand to secure the rudder and lift back to the surface.
I have not yet used the echo sounder or had it working, but it does have a fish finder, so I am hoping that it can source the rudder.
Cheers
Josh