Hey guys, I've posted a few pics in a previous topic and had some tell me to and not to inspect the transom and flooring...so today I was able to eck out a few hours on the boat, tore off the seats, bimini, tank, engine etc etc and started cutting as I felt it would be best to do at least some cutting to start inspecting.<br /><br />Immediately, I went to work on the draintube - it was covered in epoxy from the former owner YEARS ago and started to split horribly at the most bottom rear of the boat around the tube where his epoxy eventually failed.<br /><br />I cut into this using a dremel set to 1/8"th deep and found the below the drain tube wood was rotted, above it was wet...so I proceeded to cut more inspection holes (dont laugh when you see them) and found them all to be wet, but they were not spongy or rotted , and immediately dried up to a firm hard wood color. Does this mean I have to replace the transom (almost impossible with this boat because of the funky shelf on the back) or can I route out the entire gelcoat and initial layers of glass matting and rebuild it from that side without removing the transom? It REALLY seems solid to me.<br /><br />Keep in mind guys, this is just a fishing boat, and I am very tight on budget. I am NOT into total restoration projects and between work and other home projects - I can only muster about 10 hours per week to work on this.<br /><br />K here is the other issue - FLOORING. Many people believe my floor may be rotted. I reached in all the inspection ports in the floor and felt around underneath and felt nothing but fiberglass..in one spot I felt soft wood however in a small area. The floor is made up of wavey looping fiberglass that is actually molded to the floor, so I have NO idea how I would go about cutting the floor out even if I wanted to as I would have to somehow get underneath to cut layers and layers of roven woven from the floor to release it - then there is , what happens next? What would the floor lay on afterwards if I cut it away - I think the hole integrity is it's looping and connections to the floor. ARGH what should I do? <br />BUT there's a hitch! I reached down the sides (not front to back but from side to side) in between one of the 'waves' of roven woven that goes from floor to hull and back, and pulled out little 1" x 2" pieces of completely rotten wood. I AM THINKING that this was wood that fell into those inspection ports when I was tearing up a rotten plywood aftermarket storage box..but have no idea. <br />Question - how hard is it to repair a 'chunk' of floor say 12"x8" in the imddle of the floor - I do plan on painting it as all of the interior paint has started to flake off and is showing the fiberglass matting now.
<br /><br />Ok guys - please take the time to answer as best as you can with all these issues if you feel you know the answer...here are some EH pictures of my issues...<br /><br />Thanks guys, I really appreciate it...I'd love to dive into this and work on this and get it working, but I am concerned mostly with saftey and durability rather than looks as it is just a giant green bathtub meant for some fishing
<br /><br /> back with inspection holes (woodpecker attack!) <br /><br /> draintube before cut <br /> <br /><br />rotten drain tube <br /><br /> The boat inside - camera almost hit the water when i pulled it out HA <br /><br /> The boat - stripped of it's stuff...