Rebuilding the Companionway Hatch
By Eric of DE38 Windsong
Rebuilding the companionway hatch was one of those projects that
sounded simple enough, but ended up being a very involved thing taking
many months longer than anticipated. Just like with most of the boat, it
is only when you take something apart that you realize the full extent
of the damage and work to be done.
Sometime when the boat was still put together, I was inside during a
rain shower noticing all of the water coming in from various leaks. One
that came as a surprise was a steady leak coming through the sliding
companionway hatch. I noted it and made sure to investigate it when the
time came to focus on that hatch.
The time came and went, and before painting the deck I removed the
hatch in its entirety to access the full deck, with the idea that I
would do whatever I needed to do to seal up the hatch and make it leak
free. When I began to remove the slats that make up the top of the
hatch, the horrors beneath were revealed and instead of applying some
sealant and calling it a day, I realized I had to rebuild the entire
thing.
The pictures and captions below will tell the story:
Companionway hatch and doors, pre-removal
Companionway hatch and doors, pre-removal. You can see the wood was in a pretty weathered state.
Companionway hatch and doors, pre-removal. You can see the wood was in a pretty weathered state.
Companionway hatch and doors, pre-removal. You can see the wood was in a pretty weathered state.
Hatch frame after removing the sliding part.
Hatch back at home ready to be taken apart
After
removing the bungs on the slats and pulling off the frame underneath,
the damage was beginning to be revealed. The frame had a lot of rot and a
huge crack down the middle of each side, and you can see a big hunk of
wood that broke off from the end. All of this was restorable, with good
old epoxy.
However,
the real gremlin was revealed when I removed the slats. Underneath the
slats and between the formica bottom was what appeared to be a piece of
plywood that had completely rotten away. The leak I saw had done some
major damage to the plywood supporting the hatch.
When
I first saw this I didn’t even know what i was looking at. Was there
some sort of veneer under the slats? It didn’t even make sense. I
eventually put it together that it was plywood that had just rotten
away.
Frame
under the ply and slats. Lots of cracks and rot, but I committed to
restoring the frame so I didn’t have to start from scratch.
Under it all was a formica panel that was the inside face to the hatch.
The
hatch doors were in decent shape. They needed some mild restoration in
areas where wood was damaged, but mostly just needed a cleaning, sanding
and finish job. I also wanted to replace the glass with tinted acrylic
and seal it up tight.
The inside of the doors had the same stain as the rest of the interior wood.
The glass frame was held on by some sealant, and was easy enough to remove with a scraper and hammer.
Glass pulled out, sealant was cleaned off and the whole thing was sanded down.
I
don’t have any pictures between this and the last picture. But there
the doors are all clean, sanded, restored, acrylic installed and sealed
up.
Hatch frame getting the epoxy treatment.
More hatch and frame components getting the epoxy treatment.
Hatch
slats getting a final coat of epoxy before reassembly. The pink is
epoxy compound that I used to fill damaged and rotted areas.
I
had a panicky moment when I tried to do a dry-fit before fully
reassembling the hatch. One slat was missing, and I went on an easter
egg hunt that took a few weeks to finish. I eventually found the slat
behind all sorts of crap in my garage. You can see in this picture the
difference between the cleaned and sanded slats and an untreated one.
Everything
taped up and ready for reassembly. Each slat was bedded and sealed up
with Life Calk polysulfide sealant. It was an extremely messy job, but
it is sealed tight. What I don’t show and didn’t have a picture of was
the new plywood piece that goes between the fame and the slats. I used
my normal fir plywood with a few coats of epoxy to seal up and and avoid
the fate of the prior ply. Instead of using a formica under-belly, I
just painted the ply white on the bottom.
Once
again I did a poor job with the pictures of reassembly and the bedding
of the sealant. But here is the hatch getting bunged up.
All put back together and sanded down.
Restored frame getting installed and bunged.
Bungs! Installed with varnish, not glue or epoxy.
Final fit and the rear panel getting installed. Before installing I used a dry lubricant for the tracks.
3 coats of Cetol Natural Teak, 2 coats of Cetol Gloss to finish. Looks beautiful if you ask me.
You can see some of the repair work here. Glossy gloss too
Pretty shine
The whole thing all done up and in working order.
To see more of Eric and Windsong visit<a
href=”http://www.thequestforwindandwaves.com”>
http://www.thequestforwindandwaves.com</a>