Sailinagin wrote:
But, if the tiller arms are locked down are the rudders supposed to kick up then too? I cannot pull the rudders up if they are down. I have seen attaching a fish type scale to set the springs so that about 24 lbs of force will kick the rudder up. Mine will not kick up at all.
Yes, the rudders should be able to kick up when locked down, even with the old-style 18 rudder system. If your rudders don't kick, you risk breaking the rudder, rudder pin, lower casting, or hull transom. I've written on this forum before about some of the things I've done to get the old-style system to work the way it's intended.
In summary, what you want to do is lightly grease the roller in the upper casting and the aluminum hook in the lower casting on their contact surfaces only. This may require re-application a few times per season if you sail a lot. Also, set the hook (cam) pressure screw on the bottom of the lower casting to the absolute minimum pressure required so the upper casting just "clicks" into the lower casting and stays there when the rudders are locked down. Last step, install a rudder kick-down kit. This is nothing more than a bungee cord that wraps around the rudder and rudder pin held in place with some special washers (available through Hobie or Murrays). The bungee is doing 90% of the work holding the rudder down. When you hit bottom, the rudders will kick. I've had my rudders set up this way for years and it works.
In some ways I prefer the old-style castings because there is never any issue with having the rudder cam get stuck in the wrong position or getting the cam to fully lock down.
As for the 5" of play at the tip of your rudders, this is most likely an issue of the holes in your rudders being enlarged or mislocated. Adding the rudder kick-down kit (bungee) will help eliminate some of this slop.
sm