Dan,
There are no bearings, ball or roller!
What you have to replace is the sleave at the top of the rudder post.
What you have to do now is this:-Remove the rudder block in your cockpit and measure the shaft diameter.
Check condition of keys, replace if necessary. Should have no rounded corners.
Go to a large marine slip that deals in yatchts and get a new rudder sleave. They should know what you are talking about.
Get some 6mm SS 316 threaded rod x 1m long.(Can somebody confirm the size, as could not find an old bronze bolt)
10 x 6mm ss locking nuts.
tube of Silaflex
When you slip:-Ensure that the rudder width can hang well clear of any cross beams on the slip.
Ensure that you have about a meter clear below the base of the keel. You should measure this before you go up and if necessary arrange for extra blocks to lift you higher on the lift.
On the slip:-Go up and remove the rudder block ensuring you note where and what way the keys go.
Undo, grind off the heads of the bolts holding the bronze shoe at the bottom of the rudder.
Drive out the bolts, These were originally of bronze with the heads roved over.
Support the base of the rudder.
Now drop the rudder to the deck and manuover it out of its shaft.
Back up top and you will find where that sleave went, remove all traces of the old one.
Check the lenght of sleave required, reduce length if necessary. Check that it goes on the rudder shaft.
Replace sleave. You may have to drve it in. Check the tolerences.
This was where your problems were
.
Clean the shaft of the rudder do any fibre glass work nescessary on rudder.
Note that the rudders are quiet light, if yours is very heavy it may have water in, you will see it running out for some time when you first go up. Drain and see above.
Lift the rudder back into place and support, in cockpit replace the rudder block.
Check for free movement of the rudder.
Hold rudder up and refix rudder shoe (in silaflex) with the ss threaded shaft. You can get bronze rod if you want to.
Hey! its all done for another 20 years or so
You can also find all sorts of information on rudders in previous post. (2007-8 I think.)
Ok, did I get the process right, any variations out there that I don't know of?Good luck Dan, its not a big job.
Phillip
SEAKA