[C320-list] Check your stem fitting - near catastrophic failure to C320

Daryl Hunt drhunt at rochester.rr.com
Tue Aug 4 07:55:05 PDT 2015


Hi Graeme,
     FYI, when I click on the tinypic link I don't see the image.

/Best regards,
/

/Daryl
'99 C320 #660 Believe
/


On 8/04/15 10:15 AM, Graeme Clark wrote:

> Just to correct my own post!
>
> The perspective of the picture I posted made me wrongly state there was a backing plate, I can now see that it is in fact looking at the entire broken cross-section of the vertical bar to which the forestay (headstay?) connects.
>
> You can see a tiny rusty part, which someone with better engineering knowledge may confirm to be crevice corrosion -  almost certainly starting from a tiny pit where the  triangular gussets are welded in place?
>
> Still very tricky to spot and worth a good look at your own boat to check for a similar issue maybe?
>
> Graeme
>
> On 4 Aug 2015, at 13:12, Graeme Clark <cg at skyflyer.co.uk> wrote:
>
>> The C320 that I used to share before buying my own, suffered a near catastrophic failure of the stem fitting that attaches the forestay to the bow, last week;
>>
>> How they didn't lose the mast I don't know
>>
>> The boat is  serial no 303 built in 1996
>>
>> This link, pasted into your browser, will show the failure, the red arrow is the fractured surface
>> http://tinypic.com/r/t8lwz9/8
>> (by the way, the halyard you see is the jury-rig to keep the mast up!)
>>
>> For interest you may wish to see the current design of replacement offered by CD
>> http://www.catalinadirect.com/index.cfm/product/2573_699/stem-fitting-c-320-c-34-c-36.cfm
>>
>> Note that CD state they have removed the unnecessary and non structural triangular gussets that are clearly visible on the part that failed.
>>
>> But you will also note that there is a ‘backing plate’ joining those two gussets that is located close to and to the rear of the part that failed.
>>
>> My guess is that a small defect or other stress concentration was present on the rear of the vertical bar and over the years repeated flexing has caused a fatigue crack to develop and propagate.
>>
>> The point is that it is very difficult to see this area, and I think any crack would be very unlikely to be spotted with a routine cursory inspection.
>>
>> I have no idea if there’s any history of these parts failing, but If so I was not aware of it.
>>
>> I would strongly recommend a careful  inspection of your own boat to make sure that no crack is developing in the same area.
>>
>> I hope the above description is clear, but if I have confused you, please ask away and I will try and  explain further
>>
>> Regards
>>
>> Graeme
>> #366, Jaskar
>



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