Just Curious and Just For Fun

Woodonglass

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There is always a debate on What material to use for transoms and stringers? How long will it last? Never want to do it again!! Soooo I'm curious! How many of our members currently are still floating around in boats that they have owned for more than 5 yrs! 10 yrs! 15 yrs! Whatever! Have they been Restored? By You? By someone else? Are they Tin, Glass, Wood? Just to get an idea. I'm of the opinion that a Wood Transom and Wood Stringer boat when sealed properly with Glass and Resin and maintained properly should last 40 + years. My 1961 has the same stringers and Transom. Don't WANT this to become and Argument, just want to see how LONG some of these boats can last IF they are built and maintained properly without using all the NEW and IMPROVED Space Aged Materials.:joyous:
 

sasto

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

That's kinda hard to answer, Wood.

There was a time when they said a plastic boat couldn't outlast a wooden one.

I like the weight savings of composites and the strength of plywood.
 

carribbean soul

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

well in 1996 (before interwebs) I put a transom in a 1974 performer using 7oz cloth and boat yard resin (poly) and marine plywood it lasted until 2011 when I went and drilled holes for some trim tabs and water poured out. the wood had turned to mush. So currently I am redoing the entire boat in marine plywood and epoxy using tip's from here but mainly following this rebuild as a guide.Bateau2 - Builder Forums • View topic - Seacraft 23 - shine
I am planing this boat to last the remainder of my life in serviceable condition.
 

sphelps

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Woody I.ll check back in if I ever get her in the water .. :rolleyes::pray::whistle::lol:
 

ondarvr

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

well in 1996 (before interwebs) I put a transom in a 1974 performer using 7oz cloth and boat yard resin (poly) and marine plywood it lasted until 2011 when I went and drilled holes for some trim tabs and water poured out. the wood had turned to mush. So currently I am redoing the entire boat in marine plywood and epoxy using tip's from here but mainly following this rebuild as a guide.Bateau2 - Builder Forums • View topic - Seacraft 23 - shine
I am planing this boat to last the remainder of my life in serviceable condition.

This is a typical result when the wrong products are used in the wrong way.

Cloth and polyetser don't go together, instant failure point. Water pouring out of the transom and the wood being mulch has nothing to do with the resin (sort of), it has to do with the combination of products and the methods used.

Please don't take offense to this, as none is inteded.

Here is a copy and past from something I wrote a couple years ago.



I deal with many different markets in the composites industry, not just the marine end of it and for the most part I agree with XstreamVking.

Since I don't see bond failure as an issue in anything I've built or repaired with polyester or VE over the last 40+ years and it isn't really an issue for the my customers, which have built many thousands of boats themselves, it seems the bond issue is more a case of poor workmanship or bad design. The prep needed for either type of resin is the same, epoxy may let you do a poor job with a little better chance of success though.


When I see bond failures it’s typically when a rookie decides to do a F/G repair on his boat (insert any item in place of a boat) and heads down the hardware store. They buy whatever resin it is that has been sitting on the shelf for a couple of years and some cloth (no mat), no sand paper, acetone, or any other needed items. They pull the boat out from under a tree in the side yard, use a damp cloth to move some of the leaves away and make a feeble attempt to wipe off the green and brown gunk that has accumulated on the surface for the last 10 years. At this point they remember they should sand the surface, so they go back in the garage and find an old piece of fairly fine grit sand paper that has been used many times on other projects. Now they make a couple of half hearted passes over the surface with the sand paper, which instantly clogs up with the damp green gunk still on the surface. It gets one more wipe with an old rag that was last used to check the oil on his truck and he now feels he’s ready to catalyze some resin.

Now, how much catalyst to add…..was that 2%, 20%, 50%...and how do you know what 2% is…or did they say 2 drops per quart…oh well, it’s not that important, I’ll just poor a little in…oops…too much (I think). Now where is that old paint brush I used to do the trim on the windows a couple of years ago…..there it is…wow, maybe I should have cleaned it better…sort of stiff. OK now I just pour some resin on the surface and lay this 1’x1’ piece of cloth on it, I only “prepped” a 6”x6” square, but it should be fine…maybe even stronger. Let’s see, what do I do with all this extra resin…it sure took a lot less to wet out that piece of cloth than I thought. I think I’ll just pour the rest of it around on some of the other cracks to strengthen other areas too…don’t want to waste it. Looks like rain…good thing I’m done…now I’ll go in and have a beer.

A week later he heads to the lake puts the boat in the water and it doesn’t leak, it was a successful repair. Two weeks later he runs over a big wake while pulling a tuber and the repair starts to leak, he reaches down and grabs a corner of the cloth that is sticking up, the part he couldn’t get to lay down, must have been because it was folded over. He pulls and the cloth comes right off with little effort. That night he goes on line and asks on a boat forum why it failed, he tells them he did everything according the directions but it still failed. He is told that polyester resin is very weak, won’t stick to anything and that he needs to use epoxy, so he orders some online the next day. While waiting for the epoxy to arrive he starts to clean off the “failed” polyester resin and finds it is sticking in some areas and won’t chip off. This time the neighbor sees what he is doing and offers him the use of a small grinder, this speeds things up dramatically and removes all of the old resin and green gunk that was still on the surface. The epoxy is delivered and so is some biax, he also ordered the roller and squeegee the guys on line said he would need, plus he picked up some new brushes.


This time he remembers its a 1 to 1 mix (and with a little work he can figure how much of each that is), stirs it well and from his experience before, plus the advice from the forum he uses the correct amount of resin to wet out the several layers of glass to build the surface back up and works all the bubbles out.


This time the repair holds up, now he goes back online to the forum, he’s one of the experts on the forum now because he’s done a repair before, and tells everyone how bad polyester is and that they should never use it and epoxy is the only thing that works. Sound familiar.

Back to the other stuff.

If properly designed an epoxy hull will be no stronger than a polyester or VE hull designed for the same use, only lighter, this is where the DIYer comes up short. They tend to use about the same laminate schedule as they would with polyester or VE, so they have the same weight with a much higher cost and an over built part, or repair, this results in no advantage or benefits from using epoxy. I hear people frequently say that you will save weight by doing an epoxy repair, well it would need to be a very large repair to make a meaningful difference in the weight savings. You may save the weight of a six pack on a large repair...and well….that may be very important to some people…more beer.

As for strength, most epoxies list their physical properties after being post cured, if you don't post cure it don't expect to get close to them. Also any medium to slow cure epoxy really needs to be post cured, they fall well short of the listed properties without this step.


The other issue with strength is when using low viscosity epoxy infusion resins is they tend to be much weaker than higher viscosity resins. This has to do with how they reduce the viscosity. What can happen is the physical properties can drop to a level equal to, or below those of a VE resin.

Even the many thousands of low quality ski boats built to very a low price point with the cheapest polyester resin available rarely have an actual resin/glass failure, the wood rots and they tend to hold up OK until the wood it nothing more than pulp. And even then the owner has no clue there is an issue until his foot falls through the deck.

As for high end custom or semi custom boats, why not use epoxy, it’s a great product and will allow you to build a much lighter craft. These tend to be purchased in relatively small numbers by people that can afford this type of toy, not the everyday guy.

As for the type of boats repaired or modified on this site, epoxy may be a good choice for them, that is if your plan is to put the largest outboard on it you can and then push it to the limit. Although a VE is easily up to the job. For the many more that just want their ski or fishing boat back on the water, I can’t see a good reason for using epoxy.
 

carribbean soul

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Ondarvr none taken, that's why I said before internet. Yup! I had no clue as how to do the repair, I just layered up glass until I thought the repair was right. The thing the linked thread said that stood out to me was drilling a hole was to over-drill, fill, re-drill, if the water ever got around a screw it should never get to the wood. i chose my reasons for epoxy over poly, even the retailer who sells me the epoxy wanted me to go with poly. I have learned a lot sense 1996 and visit these forums every day, hopefully it will result in a properly repaired hull.
 

Woodonglass

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Well, we're off to a so so start. Caribbean sould and Sphelps have the idea I was looking for. Ondarvr, Your years of experience are ALWAYS welcome and that post was GREAT!!! I agree with it IN TOTAL!!!! Now...What is the oldest boat in your fleet and have you restored it, and with what materials???:confused:
 

ondarvr

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

I built a Fiberglass drift boat about twenty years ago, it sits outside uncovered and has since the day it was finished. There is no wood in the boat, so even when sitting half full of ice and water I have no concerns of it having problems.

I also rebuilt an aluminum jet boat about 12 years ago, I have one regret, I wish I had not used foam under the floor, that is the one weak point.

Another glass one i have sitting around was done 20 years ago. No worries on this one either, no wood.
 

mwe-maxxowner

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Forgive me for even asking, but, with a glass boat, even if there was no wood, wouldn't you want to keep heavy water out of the foam that will never dry once it finally takes some on?
 

ondarvr

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Is did a couple about 45 years ago, one was a glass over wood ski boat, the first boat I owned. The other was my dads boat, all glass, no wood. My old boat is probably fertilizer someplace, my dads may still be in use. There were others back then, we lived on the water and when the neighbors saw me repairing boats the asked if I would do theirs too, I was 12 at the time.
 

ondarvr

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Forgive me for even asking, but, with a glass boat, even if there was no wood, wouldn't you want to keep heavy water out of the foam that will never dry once it finally takes some on?

No foam.
 

Decker83

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

I did a total rebuild on a 1969 skeeter hawk back in 1986... I bought all my materials from a swimming pool company..
I used the poly resin and 1.5 csm and some heavy woven roven.. I can't remember the weight of the roven now, but it was really thick..
I also used the gel coat they sold me to regel coat the hull..
I had no ideal what I was doing.. The gentleman at the pool company told me how to use resin and how many drops of mekp per quart..
Told me I had to lay the csm and the roven at the same time all in one wet layup..Told me how to use the bubble roller to get out the air..
All he told me about the gel coat was to spray it on thick and make it look like a orange peel..He said I could use some tint to change it from white to whatever color I would like..
He did tell me I would have to grind everything down to clean glass and use the acetone to clean with..
I went into this blind with no other help and I guess I lucked out.. I still have the boat and use it..
The gel coat was a total nightmare to work with.. I was not told about using wax or any other curing methods.. When I went to sand the gel coat all it would do is gum up the paper.. I finnally figured out to wipe the gel coat down with acetone and let it set for a few minutes and start sanding again.. It did work but it took hours just to sand down to the cured gel.. I was lucky that I sprayed enough gel to not sand through it..
I still have the boat and it is still in good shape.. It needs a good wax and the motor (1971 rude 70 hp) needs a tune up, but other than that it's good to go..
 

Woodonglass

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Ondarvr, If you built glass boats with no wood, what components did you use???
 

wolfsmurf

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

This is awesome wood! I love the war stories.lol
 

sphelps

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Ya know now that you mention it I did do a pre-iboats rebuild of my son in laws 73 Glassmaster tri-hull . Soft spots on the deck and stringers partially rotted . 2 yrs ago I thought the transom was good enough and was probably ok at the time . Tore up the bad part of the deck and put pressure treated 2x material screwed into the good parts of the old stringers . I then painted a thick coat of some waterproofing paint over that and on the bottom of some 1/2" pt plywood for the deck . Screwed decking screws into the stringers to fasten the deck . Then glassed the deck over using waxed resin and cloth from H/D . Painted it with above waterline deck paint . Also we filled in the bow seating for a casting deck . Everything we replaced is still holding up fairly well but the rest of the deck and the transom needs to be replaced now . If we don,t find a different hull this boat may be coming to an Iboats rebuild thread soon .. We,ll take it apart and do it up Iboats style !!
 

Woodonglass

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Keep em comin guys!!!! I'm sure there has to be someone out there that has a boat they've restored that's ELDERLY but still in GREAT Shape!!!!
 

Woodonglass

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

My Very first boat was a small two man Barrel Boat made from 4-30 gallon metal fertilizer barrels and a bunch of scrap lumber scavenged from a falling down building. I was 13 years old. I guess it would be more of a RAFT but hey, it floated and got the job done.
 

tazrig

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

I have a 1976 Formula 23' F-233-C. Just re-powered and the original glass transom was still 100%. No rot, No soft spots. Engine room glass over wood stringers were replaced 22 years ago (re-powered from 170hp 4 bangers to 5.7L 260hp v8's and still solid except for 2 spots where outboard engine mounts mounted. Inboard 22 year old stringers still 100%. original gas Tank and glass over wood floor replaced 15+ years ago still 100%. Installed through hull transducer. Original glass floor still 100%.
 

64osby

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

My 21' Starcraft Mariner is a 73 and still original. The transom was solid last year and it should be this year, I'll check after it is no longer freezing outside.

It has been a trailer boat it's whole life. I've had it for 3 years, has a canvas cover and is under a tarp / shelter. What ever the factory did back then, 1 1/2" ply maybe sealed??? has held so far.
 

ondarvr

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Re: Just Curious and Just For Fun

Ondarvr, If you built glass boats with no wood, what components did you use???

All glass, no foam, no wood, at 12 I couldn't figure out why you would use wood in a glass boat. The boats were small, and back then my 35HP 1958 Evinrude was a big motor. The newer boats were just glass too.
 
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