I am rebuilding my 18' Starcraft aluminum boat.
After ripping off the old rotted flooring I noticed that all of the Styrofoam sheets that Starcraft used under the flooring were saturated with water.
No doubt the water soaked floatation under the flooring contributed heavily to the rotting of the floor. Besides, I am positive the Styrofoam wouldn't float anyway it was so water-logged!
My question is whether or not to replace it?
I replace it and the same darn thing happens.
It gets wet and water-logged over time and serves no purpose except to rot my new flooring from the underside. And then doesn't keep the boat afloat anyway.
Or.......leave it out so the bilge stays relatively dry.
Just a side note - my boat really never stays overnight at a dock. Not that it never will, just that I prefer to haul it out each night. Also, I have two (2) bilge pumps, one that is 1-2" higher than the other. And I have two (2) batteries tied to them.
I know the law says that commercial boat builders must install floatation on boats smaller than 22', but does that also pertain to the private individual building/rebuilding his or her own boat?
I'm torn here.
What's the sense installing floatation that will only soak up water and become useless anyway? Especially if it will contribute to ratting of the flooring down the road?
Thoughts?
Mac
After ripping off the old rotted flooring I noticed that all of the Styrofoam sheets that Starcraft used under the flooring were saturated with water.
No doubt the water soaked floatation under the flooring contributed heavily to the rotting of the floor. Besides, I am positive the Styrofoam wouldn't float anyway it was so water-logged!
My question is whether or not to replace it?
I replace it and the same darn thing happens.
It gets wet and water-logged over time and serves no purpose except to rot my new flooring from the underside. And then doesn't keep the boat afloat anyway.
Or.......leave it out so the bilge stays relatively dry.
Just a side note - my boat really never stays overnight at a dock. Not that it never will, just that I prefer to haul it out each night. Also, I have two (2) bilge pumps, one that is 1-2" higher than the other. And I have two (2) batteries tied to them.
I know the law says that commercial boat builders must install floatation on boats smaller than 22', but does that also pertain to the private individual building/rebuilding his or her own boat?
I'm torn here.
What's the sense installing floatation that will only soak up water and become useless anyway? Especially if it will contribute to ratting of the flooring down the road?
Thoughts?
Mac