If you try a heat gun I would think it could take alot of patience, or liquor, or both.
I'm pretty impatient, but I don't see a problem there...
The one thing I did learn, cut a hole in a peice of 1/8" plywood and put it over the top of the tube to protect the deck (or bottom) from charring - or don't if you want to add some "patina" to the front of your hull.
I like the notion of using the plywood as a shield. I've done that on a smaller scale when we've used screws to hold the skins on a Renegade down to the bulkheads during gluing. In that case, I found the holes in a steel framing bracket were just right to allow the micro-torch flame to heat the screw head, but not burn the wood (too much...).
Looking at the posting date, I imagine Geoff has already worked this out - how did you do it Geoff???
Quoting Bugs Bunny, "You don't know me very well"...
I can procrastinate better than anybody! We've been working on a number of projects at
The Boatwerks recently (including a really cool project where we're cutting up a partially rotted Renegade springboard and putting it back together...) so I haven't been looking at my DN much.
I have removed the steering chock I borrowed after the GC/NAs and very carefully measured the rake on the steering post. It's about 2 degrees, leading me to believe that it's not the source of my lee-helm problem. I don't see any evidence on the chock and runner contacting (where I cut away part of the stiffener to give more clearance).
Based on those measurements, the general comments about rake, and my plan to install a short European-style steering chock (that shouldn't have any interference problems, even for extreme rake), I think I'll leave it alone.
I've started
another thread for discussion/suggestions about the underlying "lee helm" problem.
Cheers,
Geoff S.