Your centerboard definitely did not come that way from the factory!
There are lots of threads on the forum about centerboard repairs. Here are links to mine, which are current this year:
http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/viewto ... =11&t=4266 http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/viewto ... =11&t=4356http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/viewto ... =11&t=4374http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/viewto ... =11&t=4432http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/viewto ... =11&t=4469http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/viewto ... =11&t=4466Also see my photo gallery.
http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/galler ... bum_id=120There is a
dimensioned drawing of the centerboard profile (side view) in the DS class rules here on the forum.
The stock cross section is pretty inefficient. The ideal is supposed to be a NACA airfoil, developed IIRC in the 1920s or 30s for slow speed airplanes. You can do a web search and find lots of information for creating one of these shapes. Since we live in the Computer Age, most of the methods you find will involve computers in the guise of various programs or Excel spreadsheets.
Here is one from Duckworks:
http://www.duckworksmagazine.com/07/how ... /index.htmAll that seemed overly complicated to me. After all, in the 1930s before computers were invented, draftsmen plotted these foil shapes using compasses, straightedges, French curves, and wooden battens. I used a graphic solution to make a template for the foil shape of my board. The critical dimensions are chord length (fore-and-aft width of CB), leading edge radius, thickness of board, and distance of maximum thickness from leading edge. Unless you are racing it doesn't have to be perfect -- mine certainly is not. Almost anything would be an improvement over the very flat factory shape. As you may have read elsewhere, it is important for the trailing edge of the CB to be squared off about 1/8" thick, and not tapered.
http://forum.daysailer.org/forum/galler ... ge_id=1537
My new foil shape turned out almost 1/2" thicker than the stock CB. I spent a lot of money on epoxy before realizing I could build up the thickness with wood strips. Also, I filled in a lot of the missing pieces with epoxy putty, about $6 a tube in the plumbing department at Lowe's. I probably could have saved a lot of time and money by building a new CB. You may decide the same depending on your skills and tools available. There is
another recent thread on building a new CB, but I am too tired and cross-eyed to find a link at the moment.
You are fortunate to have lots of helpful people on this forum with lots of knowledge. It is a great resource.
"George Washington as a boy was ignorant of the commonest accomplishments of youth. He could not even lie."
-- Mark Twain