Just to add my 2 cents the drill test is the way to go and know for sure how far the water got and make the repair asap. The wood will never dry out and it will become an issue some day.
If the leak is a recent discovery the fix is within reach without a big rebuild project. A good thorough inspection will be worth every penny.
Best of luck
Hi, can you say more about this? This feels like an important point but I'm not sure I'm understanding. Maybe I can clarify a few things. It sounds like you're saying that the wood, once wet, will never fully dry out and will just keep rotting forever. So even if, for example, there's a small leak through a through bolt and the wood really isn't all that wet (like, optimistically, let's say a quarter sized wet patch)... that's bad just in and of itself and the transom is toast in the mid term future. This is true even if I do something like pipe warm air in there for 3 days or whatever?
And then you say that the fix is within reach if the leak is recent. Do you mean without rebuilding the whole transom? For example, like if I could do something along the lines of just cutting out the wet patch from the back and then replacing just that small patch, or something? What would you consider to be 'recent' and how big does the affected area need to be in order to be too big for a reasonable (not major) repair job? Thx.
ok so this is scary. Can others confirm, is this common? Even with licensed marine surveyors? ThxI’ve seen a lot of boats in my lifetime that passed the survey with flying colors. Then they get to our shop with multiple issues. Including bad transom’s. Not all surveyors are competent, I’m sure there are good ones out there but not all of them know enough about boats. If they run and drive, that’s all they care about.