oldboat1
Fleet Admiral
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2002
- Messages
- 9,612
Thank you OB1. Tons of info there, I will do my best to do all of those things. A few questions. What is 5200 and where can i get it? Is it nessisary, or will PB or Titebond work also? How do you put the screws in, and how many? Do you fill those holes with epoxy? When you say seal the whole piece, what exatly do you mean (what is the method for sealing?)? Also, what do you mean by fasteners? Do you mean after PBing it onto the hull skin, and then putting bolts in?
Don't want to give you conflicting info. in describing what I do. 5200 is one of the marine adhesive sealants produced by 3M. 4200 is a faster cure. I'm sure PB or Titebond would do fine. 1 1/4 inch drywall screws work fine. Stainless screws are expensive (stainless anything), and really not necessary imo. You are going to seal them in anyway. There is an exterior version that builders use, I think (green?)
The transom pieces are big. I lay it on a cement floor -- use your adhesive on one half, then fit the other on top and stand on it while attaching screws -- no set number, but be liberal. Just countersink them a bit without going through the other layer. By sealing the piece, I mean throroughly coating the whole core with the sealant of your choice. The edges need special attention, as that's where water can wick in -- special care at the top and bottom. You can completely encase the core with resin and cloth, but I don't do that. I do butter the edges with thickened epoxy (again, my method), and you may want to butter the edges and cover with the polyester cloth. (Honestly, it's probably overkill.)
Dry fit the new core, then hit it generously with adhesive -- appears you will have only the outer skin in place, so glue and clamp or screw to the outer skin. The through bolting I was describing applies to fitting the core into an envelope (inner and outer skins in place). I'm pretty sure in your case you will be doing the inner skin last, so a little different. You have access to the edges when it's in place, though, and I would put more of the adhesive sealant all around the edges. You want something that adheres and seals, but remains flexible
When you do refit the hardware, use some adhesive sealant in the holes (including the hole for the brass drain which you will replace).