Harry Murphey wrote:
T-Bone,
I have the "up-Graded" Rudder castings on my 1984 H18 ... and I sail in salt water. So NO aluminum rudderpins for me. I use Murray's "Hollow" Stainless Steel Rudder pins w/ the Nyloc bushings. They are lighter and stronger then the "Solid" Stainless Steel Rudder pins from Hobie .... and they are cheaper too. (Sorry Jeremy)
No worries Harry. You know what they say about opinions.
Cheaper= check (you're comparing apples to oranges; solid vs. hollow, so it's not exactly a fair comparison but I'll give it to you)
Lighter= check
Stronger= hold on a minute
Do you know how many hollow pins I've personally had to cut out of castings? At least a hundred. They bend and get tweaked because they can not support the loads, especially when sailing in waves and strong wind. When they bend there's only one way to get them out, cut em. And it's not pretty. You have to take the blade out of the hacksaw and do it with your fingertips. Conversely, I have never had to cut a solid stainless one.
Aluminum ones are no problem, they wear out at the interface, or bend like a pretzel and they're easy to cut.
Oh yea, and Harry. To fix your rudder castings with the elongated holes. Put some wax on a new set of Hobie bushings, mix up a batch of epoxy, use 404 or other HD filler and fill em with the bushings in place. You'll be set.
J