Not sure why I didn't join this group sooner but happy to be here now. Plus I dumped Fakebook and lost the access to the valuable MacGregor pages there. I am a retired boat bum that spent 2 years living on a 1999 Mac 26X. I cruised solo, living on the hook from Puget Sound to Desolation Sound for one summer, and then trailer-ed it to San Diego, living full time at Pier 32 marina. I now live in Port Townsend, WA and am land locked while I search for a trawler to live on. I currently have a 1984 Mac 21 I picked up for "free" that I am rebuilding. The hull is in great shape except for one potentially big problem. But I haven't been able to put it in the water yet to see if it is even a problem. Having the weight of the boat on the trailer causes oil canning at the tips of the bunks on these boats, and others. I had a Catalina 22 that did the same thing, but it was harmless to the hull on that boat. My Mac 26x also did it, but very mild (but no heavy keel). The bad thing on this boat is that the oil canning pushed so far into the hull that it cracked the floor liner on the inside. Just above each aft bunk end, the glass is cracked inside the boat. There is no visible damage to the hull. Getting it in the water will be the test I think. Has anyone seen this? My thought is that it is caused by not lowering the keel onto the trailer while towing. That would transfer all that weight directly to the trailer and not use the boat to do it. Someone attempted a repair to reinforce the area inside the bilge, but it is a poorly done repair and prevents better inspection of the hull. (apologies if you know the boat and did the work).
So just wondering if I should expect water to seep through fine cracks in the hull I can't see, or if the cracks inside are common but the boat survives? Hoping for the later! Everything else with the hull is in really good shape.
Looking forward to learning from this group and sharing what I know.






