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Commander
- Joined
- May 31, 2002
- Messages
- 2,842
Re: I keep on hearing how Bayliner boats have a bad reputation, how bad is it?
Flip the seat up in your boat and take a picture of the base for us, I'd be interested to see it. Maybe 1991 was a good year for them!
Out of the 4 seat backs and 4 seat bases on my 1996 Bayliner, only one was not rotted out when it was 5 years old. I used this one as a pattern and replaced them all with treated plywood coated with 2 coats of spar varnish. They still looked like new when I sold the boat. The seat foam was originally wrapped in some thin, brittle plastic that had cracked over the years. The boat was heavily used for watersports with 5 or 6 kids, their wet suits drained down the seats and the foam got damp through the cracks in the wrapping. It rotted the gray primed wood totally away. You can also see some of the rust marks from the staples around the edge in the survivor here:
actually the wood in my boat has not been replaced, and it does not have gray primer.
Flip the seat up in your boat and take a picture of the base for us, I'd be interested to see it. Maybe 1991 was a good year for them!
Out of the 4 seat backs and 4 seat bases on my 1996 Bayliner, only one was not rotted out when it was 5 years old. I used this one as a pattern and replaced them all with treated plywood coated with 2 coats of spar varnish. They still looked like new when I sold the boat. The seat foam was originally wrapped in some thin, brittle plastic that had cracked over the years. The boat was heavily used for watersports with 5 or 6 kids, their wet suits drained down the seats and the foam got damp through the cracks in the wrapping. It rotted the gray primed wood totally away. You can also see some of the rust marks from the staples around the edge in the survivor here:
