I've just received my shiny new Jefa roller (bottom) bearing and the boat is coming out in a week. However, therein lies the problem. To install it, the rudder has to come out. But there are loads of other jobs too, including scraping, skin fittings, coppercoating and saildrive works. For all of these, it'd be quite convenient to have to boat at the regular level, which is with the bottom of the keel near ground level. But not for the rudder.
On Jefa's excellent FTP server I've found a construction drawing of my rudder and worked out that the boat needs to be pretty far up, specifically with the bottom of the keel almost a metre (0.92m) above the ground. That gives me the exact clearance under the rudder (1.34m) that I need to drop it straight down and clear the hull with the top of the rudder shaft.
But! The bottom bearing is a self-aligning one, meaning once the top is released, there is a certain degree it can go sideways, increasing the further down it is (but limited by the bearing frame). So finally my question, how much minimum clearance do I really need to get the thing out? Did you do this before, and how did you do it? I cannot dig a hole in the boatyard, it's tarmac.
The alternatives are less than ideal, either doing it in the slings in a hurry and at great cost, or asking the boatyard to lift the boat onto a higher cradle after all the other jobs are done. I'll talk to the boatyard about that, but knowing them anything involving lifting the boat will probably be another hefty charge and who knows if they have supports of that size (they shoud, but...).