tomdmx
Well-Known Member
I've managed to get my hands on an ultrasound from one of the chaps in the boatyard (he is a surveyor but works for the boat yard also)...so I sounded below and above waterline...
In the keel I got a consistent 4.5-5mm thickness but after scraping off 2-3mm of pain on the sides below water line, I got a consistent 3.1/3.2 mm thickness of steel (and above waterline with paint I got 4.5mm). I tested in approx 20 spots...
Where I could access the tested areas on the other side, the steel appeared very solid etc as I got concerned about thickness. I then talked to the surveyor chap and said that 3mm is not much but it may be likely that this yacht has been built in part a different type of steel named kardan which fits the years and the fact that the thickness would not be much beyond 3mm..No other signs of rust (ie no pitting etc) is evident either (some on the paint but removing two coats shows nice clean steel)...
This is a sloop built in Harlingen boat yard in Holland, by Van Der Vlis under Van Der Stadt design (well the plate states Cumulant, Harlingen boat yards, Van D. Vlis) in the 70s...
So is this thickness a problem?
In the keel I got a consistent 4.5-5mm thickness but after scraping off 2-3mm of pain on the sides below water line, I got a consistent 3.1/3.2 mm thickness of steel (and above waterline with paint I got 4.5mm). I tested in approx 20 spots...
Where I could access the tested areas on the other side, the steel appeared very solid etc as I got concerned about thickness. I then talked to the surveyor chap and said that 3mm is not much but it may be likely that this yacht has been built in part a different type of steel named kardan which fits the years and the fact that the thickness would not be much beyond 3mm..No other signs of rust (ie no pitting etc) is evident either (some on the paint but removing two coats shows nice clean steel)...
This is a sloop built in Harlingen boat yard in Holland, by Van Der Vlis under Van Der Stadt design (well the plate states Cumulant, Harlingen boat yards, Van D. Vlis) in the 70s...
So is this thickness a problem?