I just recently removed my old outboard to get my transom ready for a new one. My transom trim was badly cracked and I just removed it. In the attached pic you can see what it looks like. There is an exposed edge which has some sort of sealant that is chipping away and very old.
What should I use to seal this area up? I was thinking either Marine Tex to fill this gap and sand it out smooth or 5200 or just regular silicon. Any thoughts??
Also, being that there is a curve on both sides of the transom, what do you recommend for the trim? Ideas I have are:
1.) Thick flexible white vinyl cut to size of transom trim, then screwed down and sealed with 5200. Getting the angle good might be hard though with out lots of screws.
2.) Aluminum piece that's from Home Depot that many people talk about using. It is already angled. I would just cut it on both sides before the curve. For the curve, either use nothing (just have edge sealed up real nice) or use vinyl for looks. Are these pieces corrosion resistant?
Another question:
For bolt holes when mounting new motor: Many people use 5200 but I've heard that can be a bad choice if you ever remove. Do you think regular silicon, or 4200?
Also, on my old motor there appeared to be some sort of rubber-like material under the mount holes that may have been there for vibration??? Not sure, but is that something that would be used or do most people just slap on the new motor and seal up holes?
Thanks in advance!
What should I use to seal this area up? I was thinking either Marine Tex to fill this gap and sand it out smooth or 5200 or just regular silicon. Any thoughts??
Also, being that there is a curve on both sides of the transom, what do you recommend for the trim? Ideas I have are:
1.) Thick flexible white vinyl cut to size of transom trim, then screwed down and sealed with 5200. Getting the angle good might be hard though with out lots of screws.
2.) Aluminum piece that's from Home Depot that many people talk about using. It is already angled. I would just cut it on both sides before the curve. For the curve, either use nothing (just have edge sealed up real nice) or use vinyl for looks. Are these pieces corrosion resistant?
Another question:
For bolt holes when mounting new motor: Many people use 5200 but I've heard that can be a bad choice if you ever remove. Do you think regular silicon, or 4200?
Also, on my old motor there appeared to be some sort of rubber-like material under the mount holes that may have been there for vibration??? Not sure, but is that something that would be used or do most people just slap on the new motor and seal up holes?
Thanks in advance!