Re: If seacast is the easy way, I'd hate to try the hard way!!!
I ****ing give up with this seacast method. Now i'm really annoyed. I cut the top off the transom. Bought a cheap electric chainsaw from homebase (electric), with the knowledge that it would not reach right the way to the bottom. Reason I did this was to minimise time spent with my dad's very noisy but longer petrol chainsaw. I'm doing the job on my driveway in my lovely quiet neighbourhood. So I spent nearly 12 hours in total, with 2 chainsaws, a drill with two extension pieces with wood hole cutter with point ground off, crowbar, chisels etc. After 12 hours+ I'm still finding areas I can't get to due to the varying width of the transom and the fact that as I get deeper into the transom with the chainsaw the exhaust gases go between the skins an blow upwards into my face and nearly kill me!In addition the fibreglass skin is very thin at the top of the transom and very thick at the bottom, (i imagine for structural reasons) so the width of the cavit varies to such an extent that I can't fit the drill bit in as I get further down. Some of you might say "USE EVER DECREASING SIZED DRILL BITS" but it's taking hours with the bigger one and only removes the wood intermittenly as after having removed the sharp point you cannot drill precicesely, you need a flat starting point. So, despite the fact that I really wanted the seacast transom for longevity ( I realise this is a scientifically unproven statement but it looks good in theory on paper !!! LOL) I lost my rag as i felt I was no longer able to progress and I only had 2 hours left of light so I drove to diy shop and bought a cheap grinder and "MULLERED" the outer skin, to enable complete removal of very rotten timber.
I know, I know, some of you old hands out there will be saying "avoid removing the outer skin at all costs" but on my boat the ply extends past the ends of the inner skin, plus there is a splashwell, plus the outer skin already looked a bag of (not sweets!) because of some poorly filled self draining holes.
So I'm gonna have to go back to the traditional method, and that leaves me with some questions.
1. How do I replace plywood when lower transom is narrower than upper transom?
2. On outer skin, how far widthways past the ply should I cut my vertical lines and do I need to somehow "step" the cut depth for each layer of matt?
3. Pressure treated ply or marine ply, what is the difference? Exterior ply???
4. I live in England so I would prefer to use Epoxy as the temperature only gets up to 70 degrees her in july and august and I ain't plannong any more delays cos it's nearly 2 years and the fish are gonna die of OLD AGE!!!!!!, lol. Is there anything else I need to consider???
5. Do I need to "rough up" the inside of the inner skin with a wire brush or something before I start with the resin and matt?
6. I have damaged the gel-coat on the top of the inner skin in places where I have been levering with my pry bar. Do - simply fill this with gel-coat filler and paint?