nineteensixtycaddy
Seaman
- Joined
- May 21, 2008
- Messages
- 74
Ok... pick 2 is what I've heard the most, so I'm goin with fast, and cheap, and I'll work my butt off if need be.
Here's what I've got....
one royally rotted 15 foot closed bow fiberglass ski boat. mid 1950's
floors are out, stringers are pretty rotted, but still exist.
fiberglass is dry, some pin holes, some minor cracking in clear coat/gel coat
and a couple old fiberglass patch jobs that hold water but look REALLY bad.
Here's what I"ve done.
removed the old outboard, wiring, lights, tie downs, controls, burnt up switches, buttons, etc.
removed as much rotten stringer material as possible.
I've also sanded and filled the upper body, several times with a semi-flexible filler similar to drywall patch.
I plan to prime it, paint it, and then put on quite a few coats of polyeurethane, or some similar type sealant, to keep the H20 from doing it's worst.
the patch stuff I used is somewhat water soluble, so sealing it is a MUST, or it'll turn to mud again, and wash away.
My question is,
what about the bottom of the boat? Can I do the same thing? with the mud if I seal it well?
My plans for the stringers include sistering with treated 1 by's, and slathering with truck bed liner, plus adding some triangulated stringers to the transom, for added strength, as I think it'd be a good idea.
The transom does look good, from the outside, but I think I can tell that any wood inside the transom is gone, but luckily whoever had this thing did some cool stainless additions to the transom. It's got a stainless mounting pad inside and out at the top and bottom of the transom, and those suckers are SOLID. So... I'm not worried about the motor moving any, but I still wanna trianguate it with the stringers for the heck of it.
So I guess what I'm asking is.. will sistering (or more like sandwiching in my case) the old stringers provide enough strength?
I've never seen triangulated stringers to a transom... any suggestions or ideas about that? I've done plenty of triangulation with repair of homes, and strengthening old sheds, and I'm figuring "why not" for the transom.
And lastly... what's the best for sealing up the outside of this old fiberglass boat, to avoid leaks, cheaply. I don't wanna re-glass and re-gel-coat it, just seal it up well enough to float for the day. I'm really thinking a good patch job for looks, and a bunch of coats of poly to seal it against leaks, should do me ok. But perhaps I'm nuts, and need some reality.
Thanks
Here's what I've got....
one royally rotted 15 foot closed bow fiberglass ski boat. mid 1950's
floors are out, stringers are pretty rotted, but still exist.
fiberglass is dry, some pin holes, some minor cracking in clear coat/gel coat
and a couple old fiberglass patch jobs that hold water but look REALLY bad.
Here's what I"ve done.
removed the old outboard, wiring, lights, tie downs, controls, burnt up switches, buttons, etc.
removed as much rotten stringer material as possible.
I've also sanded and filled the upper body, several times with a semi-flexible filler similar to drywall patch.
I plan to prime it, paint it, and then put on quite a few coats of polyeurethane, or some similar type sealant, to keep the H20 from doing it's worst.
the patch stuff I used is somewhat water soluble, so sealing it is a MUST, or it'll turn to mud again, and wash away.
My question is,
what about the bottom of the boat? Can I do the same thing? with the mud if I seal it well?
My plans for the stringers include sistering with treated 1 by's, and slathering with truck bed liner, plus adding some triangulated stringers to the transom, for added strength, as I think it'd be a good idea.
The transom does look good, from the outside, but I think I can tell that any wood inside the transom is gone, but luckily whoever had this thing did some cool stainless additions to the transom. It's got a stainless mounting pad inside and out at the top and bottom of the transom, and those suckers are SOLID. So... I'm not worried about the motor moving any, but I still wanna trianguate it with the stringers for the heck of it.
So I guess what I'm asking is.. will sistering (or more like sandwiching in my case) the old stringers provide enough strength?
I've never seen triangulated stringers to a transom... any suggestions or ideas about that? I've done plenty of triangulation with repair of homes, and strengthening old sheds, and I'm figuring "why not" for the transom.
And lastly... what's the best for sealing up the outside of this old fiberglass boat, to avoid leaks, cheaply. I don't wanna re-glass and re-gel-coat it, just seal it up well enough to float for the day. I'm really thinking a good patch job for looks, and a bunch of coats of poly to seal it against leaks, should do me ok. But perhaps I'm nuts, and need some reality.
Thanks