When sailing my H16 I noticed that the hulls were "flexing". What I mean is that you could see that the leeward hull would "rotate" in relation to the windward hull, the one I was sitting on.
Back on land I would put the boat on the grass and push up one of the hulls. It came up for quite a bit (say, 10 inches) before the other hull would follow.
Now, as I know from this forum, and also from an article in "On the Wire", this is not a new problem, and there is also a solution: glue the frame and the pylons together. But, I like taking the boat apart for winter storage. Glueing, therefore, is an option I don't want to consider. So, I investigated the cause for the flex first before trying to think about a different solution.
I started out easy and checked the tramp - I know from many posts in this forum that it needs to be really tight. Which it was.
Then I took a closer look at the pylon/corner casting joint. Interesting: if you looked at the rear corner from under the tramp, and somebody pushed up the hull, you could see the casting and the rear cross bar move like a clapper around the pylon.
I took the boat apart and checked if the pylons were loose. No such thing. I then noticed that the bolt holes in the pylons weren't circular anymore, and rather worn out. This must be it: the worn pylon holes allow the bolts movement, and thus the boat flexes when the hulls are under different loads.
So, I need a solution which reduces the bolts' movement. Again, glueing comes to mind. But here's another idea - let me know what you think:
1) Get four short aluminium tubes; inner diameter == bolt diameter, length == pylon inner width at bolt holes.
2) Get epoxy and high-density filler.
3) Start with the boat taken apart. Fill the four pylons with epoxy (HD filler mixed in) until it starts oozing out of the bolt holes. Keep breather tubes in the forward pylons.
4) Put one aluminium tube into each pylon such that the bolts will go through them after boat re-assembly.
5) Add more epoxy, about as much as used in step (3).
6) Re-assemble boat and tighten tramp. Take care that the hulls are aligned correctly (just like when glueing the frame). Let epoxy cure.
I believe the alum tubes, with sufficiently small inner diameter, would restrain the movement of the bolts. Hence, stiffer boat. The epoxy again, should take the load of the tube inserts.
Does this make sense? Might the epoxy break when under load? Any other problems that you see? Do you think it'll WORK?

Regards,
H77