I think I'm pretty sold on the 3.0L. Everything I read says it is an outstanding engine. Going to look at a donor boat on Tuesday.
Does anybody have any advice on what to do with this transom? Right now it looks pretty straight forward, it's plywood and it was painted with some sort of anti-fouling paint. People are telling me that I should paint over the new transom with fiberglass resin, and DON"T use marine grade plywood if I do that. I'm kind of thinking that my biggest problem in the future is going to be dry-rot. My boat isn't going to be kept in the water and it only gets used a dozen times per summer at most. It almost seems to me that I should leave it exposed (no resin or anything) and use some sort of product on it to prevent dry-rot. If I seal it with resin or something, water will get into it eventually and it will rot. So I'm thinking leave it unsealed and exposed, so it dries out after it gets wet, but use some sort of treatment to maintain some level of moisture in it, so it doesn't dry out completely and dry-rot. The transom that is in there (painted plywood) seems to be original, making it over 50 years old. 50 years is a pretty long life I think... It seems successful enough, why mess with it? Anybody have any thought?
Thanks Watermann. So I am clear, if I do this or what bondo did, there is no need to worry about fiberglassing? Fiberglass is not one of my skill sets. I would probably do an amateur job if I have to do it .