At least, until I open the hatch. Then water runs down the open hatch to the hinge from the backside, which I had not anticipated and did not seal! Guess the hatch is coming off and some butyl rubber going on!

Cliffmeister2000 wrote:At least, until I open the hatch. Then water runs down the open hatch to the hinge from the backside, which I had not anticipated and did not seal!
mcspin50 wrote:At International Northwoods Gathering 3 held a couple weekends ago here in lovely Minnesota, Craig from Camp-Inn was pointing out to me how they secure a piece of waterproof fabric from under the roof side of the hurricane hinge to under the galley side of the hinge leaving enough slack in the fabric so that the galley can open up fully. The fabric runs from one side to the other and acts like a drip pan catching any rain that might get between the two parts of the hinge. Do my words make sense or would it help if I draw and scan a picture?
Would this solve your problem Cliff?
mcspin50 wrote:I'm thinking it would be something like this. Since I haven't become personally acquainted with a hurricane hinge, I'm not entirely sure if this is exactly what I saw,but I think it's close. Hope this helps make your repair less traumatic.
Cliffmeister2000 wrote:Well, folks, I thought I had done a bang-up job on my hatch, used a better than hurricane hinge, sealed it well, etc. Sure enough, it doesn't leak.
At least, until I open the hatch. Then water runs down the open hatch to the hinge from the backside, which I had not anticipated and did not seal! Guess the hatch is coming off and some butyl rubber going on!
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