jeanff wrote:
anyone tried to completely remove the spring and tension screw?
Looking at a Hobie diagram, for post 87 boat, Hobie added the plunger (did not exist before). What is it's use?
Not sure whether completely removing the spring and screw and replacing with a bungee would work - it would certainly be easy enough to try though. I think the upper casting needs to engage the latch/ hook in order to stay seated. Otherwise the upper rudder casting may start to walk forward allowing the rudder to begin kicking up. This is just a guess though.
The plunger is specific to the plastic cam rudder systems and not required on the old 18 system with the latch/hook. The systems work on similar but different principles. On the cam systems, the convex shape at the top of the plunger engages a concave recess in the cam and this is what keeps the cam from rotating until impact. With the latch system, the pivoting latch simply locks onto the roll pin in the upper casting. The spring presses against a flat on the bottom of the latch. When the rudder is impacted, the roll pin forces the latch open and disengages - in theory at least. Unfortunately, excessive spring pressure on the latch will not allow the roll pin to force the latch open. The new system can have the same problem however since the cam is plastic the hook on the cam will just deflect and the upper casting will pop free allowing the rudder to kick. In this case, you end up with a cam stuck in the wrong position rather than a busted lower casting or transom.
sm