[Rhodes22-list] Compression Post and Head Door Problems

Allyn Baskerville allynb at adsne.com
Tue Feb 23 19:15:57 EST 2021


The vinyl flooring under the compression post is the only thing that is laying down. The previous owner put wood screws around the vinyl perimeter to hold that down. If the compression post continues on down to the bottom of the bilge, I'd be very surprised, but it may. Per Marks comments, he has some concrete under his.

When I bought the boat, it came from Wisconsin, and when I got it home, I pumped almost 10 gallons out of the bilge. I have no idea how long the water was in there, but maybe that is the source of rot. Also, based on some poor quality repair work, I'm pretty sure the mast was dropped when stepping. I doubt that would have caused the current problem, but I thought it worth noting.

-----Original Message-----
From: Rhodes22-list <rhodes22-list-bounces at rhodes22.org> On Behalf Of ROGER PIHLAJA
Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2021 8:36 AM
To: The Rhodes 22 Email List <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Compression Post and Head Door Problems

Allyn,

Are you certain your compression post ends at the top of the vinyl floor?  My compression post goes all the way to the bottom of the bilge.  Open up the bilge inspection grate in the galley.  You should see the bottom of the compression post. The only way a compression post could be as you describe is if there is also some sort of support structure under the cabin sole.  This support would transfer the load from the compression post to the hull.  Assuming this is the case; then, perhaps your under cabin sole support structure has a problem, like dry rot.  The solution would be to replace the rotted pieces/parts under the cabin sole.  I doubt the compression post itself needs to be replaced, especially if it ends at the cabin sole.  You would need to pull up the cabin sole and start replacing bad wood.

Roger Pihlaja
S/V Dynamic Equilibrium 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Feb 23, 2021, at 8:47 AM, Allyn Baskerville <allynb at adsne.com> wrote:
> 
> Hopefully, I can describe this adequately. I took pictures a couple weeks ago, but they have disappeared off my phone. As last year progressed, it became increasingly difficult to get the head door opened as it would hang on the stop that's mounted to the floor. I have to pry the door up toward the center of the cabin to get it open (I keep my fishing poles in there). I noticed that as the door hung more and more, the ¼" plywood forward the compression post would bow out a little more as the year progressed, and currently it's probably bowed out about 1/8" past the compression post toward the center of the post.
> 
> I'm not sure why this is happening, but I sailed typically 2 days/week last year with several in 20+ mph winds. I did notice the compression post is mounted on top of the vinyl flooring, so I'm not sure if this is a factor.
> 
>  1.  I'm debating putting in a slight longer and sturdier compression post. I'd appreciate your thoughts on this.
>  2.  I'm not sure how the compression post is removed, though, so if anyone can shed some light on this, I'd be very grateful.
> 
> Thanks, all.
> 
> Allyn


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