So we are talking about a 28 year old sib, that sib should have been in the waist basket long ago, with that time don't be surprised if complete sib parts begin ungluing at a fast rate soon, glue does not last that long, the fabric could be in opt state, but the repairs will overcome by far the initial amout payed.
Agreed. However for the money, I thought it was worth it. The guy was not trying to profit, he was a doctor having a garage sale on craigslist. This sib (will post pics soon) was in better shape than all the newer ones I seen on craiglist that were listed for double the price. Also this is my first boat. (New to boating)
It's mission impossible to have an idea of the hole size without ungluing leaking tube for visual inspection, seems a slow air flow to the other compartment, if the sealant is not that expensive and all other chambers are not leaking air, just seal both troubled tubes and see what happens...
Any specific way do you think I should approach this? Do you like my hanging in air from the transom idea? I was thinking since it is most likely the seal. The chamber's bulkhead (not sure of proper term here) would be an O shaped? Assuming it is an O shape, the hole(s) should be on the edge and not in the area of the O. In other words, if this whole O idea is true, I could run the sealant through small custom tube(s) into chamber #1 and do some internal surgical gluing around the O. Then in the second chamber run small custom tube to my small wet/dry vac to suck it through. Wait a week, then the the reverse (suck through chamber #1).
If nothing happens and sib remains in same condition, take your pump boating wth you, definitely will lose both chambers if any one of them is punctured, the fast/slow deflation will depend on the hole size. West Marine, Defender has some good sealants, check with them. Or go for a quote from the place you mentioned.
I keep a towline attached to the metal ring under the bow at all times. So in theory, if I had a serious accident where I lost the bow, I could pull that rope tight in the direction of the stern and fasten to the transom. Adjust my motor to not plane. Then I could safely get a shore. This would just reduce my deck size in (almost) half.
Thanks,
Rich
Philadelphia, PA