Peter, welcome. We have a WS42, but the same Groco seacocks were used as you have in your WS32. I spent the past summer replacing all of my seacocks and through-hulls. While I found the through-hulls to be somewhat sound (circa 1976), the seacocks were not salvagable.
I removed all the through-hulls and seacocks and replaced them with new Groco bronze seacocks. Some of the old seacocks were able to unscrew once I got the through-hull to move. However, I did have to cut the through hull out on most of them because the bedding compound was doing such a great job.
The cutting the through-hull "out" did not involve cutting the hull. I simply used a dremel tool to cut through the external mushroom head in a quandrant pattern. It was then a simple process of prying the pieces of bronze off. The 1976 bronze was soft enough to break with a small amount of prying so as to not damage the hull. The seacocks were easy to remove after that.
My word of caution relates to reusing the existing through-hulls. I would recommend you inspect them thoroughly. I did find mine looked great, but seemed to be more malleable than was healthy. I am also a fan of bronze seacocks, but marelon products are very well made.
What seemed at first to be a horrendous process was actually more straight forward and shall I say easier than I expected. With the exception of one 11/2 inch seacock that had an attitude problem, the removal took about 2 days or a weekend.
I also had a depth sounder that protruded from the hull on one side and a knotmeter on the other. After wrangling between (1) using GPS for speed and an in-hull depth sounder to eliminate holes in the hull or (2) depth and speed tranducers with holes in the hull, I decided to install a triducer (depth, speed, and temp,etc). Well, one less hole, but I will be able to guage current flow with the knotmeter. However, I still like the no holes option with the in-hull depth sounder: smoother hull and no holes!
Congratulations on your "new" vessel! The WOA and Bud, especially, are great resources who make Westsail ownership special.
Doug