Will it work? Sure you will have a weight hanging under the boat, but with the flat surfaces you won't have the right airfoil shape at all. You can get closer the more pieces you use to make the shape, but you will have turbulence at every edge and that will induce drag and you won't have the lift mentioned in the other posts. I admire them for tackling the job, but think in the long run you will be dissatisfied with it and will still want to either get rid of the boat, look for a donor boat or try and find a proper keel. I also think you will have a lot more time in it than you realize and even though you might feel now that a loss of performance is not that bad down the road you will probably think different.old guys sail wrote:I got the guy at MacGregor to send me a sketch of the keel. My father in law and brother in law are going to take a shot at building. My father in laws idea was to take some scrap 1/4" steel he has, cut into four pieces and weld it into sort of a stretched diamond shape. Then, depending on the weight, adding steel shot if need be. Or, he said for a little more cost he has a friend that could bend two pieces into shape so there would be no weld on the sides. They also have the means to lift the boat with no problem. This is great!!
As mentioned above in another post, I dont know with this shape if I will need to coat it. Think thats absolutely necessary?
I've done a lot of metal work and body work on cars and other projects and wouldn't tackle the job. If the keel wasn't weighted like on the Mac S I'd shape and make one using wood and glass possibly, but not a keel that has to also be weighted.
Good luck and post pictures if you guys do it and report back how happy you are with it,
Sum
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