Silverbullet555
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2011
- Messages
- 621
Part of my spring list is to reseal the garboard plug mount in the transom. When I pulled it out I was disappointed at the size of the hole as it is a bit bigger than I would like to have. I cleaned it out and sealed the wood with some additional slow set marine epoxy and then filled a couple voids (not from rot) with epoxy thickened with milled glass fibers.
I really don't like having that much of a gap to fill with 4200 or 5200. The hole itself is about 1 1/4" and drilled a little off center so the plug plate does not sit directly in the middle.
Today I wil be filing the old screw holes after I clean them out since someone sealed them with silicone.
Anyway, I am considering coating a piece of PVC with mold release and putting it into the hole then filling around it with thickened epoxy. That way I would have an epoxy tube leading right to the end of the garboard plate so water could not get anywhere it's not supposed to be. I CANNOT get to the inside of the transom so everything will have to be done from the outside which is my biggest concern. If I could get to the inside I would probably fill the entire hole and redrill the entire thing.
Then I would use 5200 to seal the small gap instead of trying to fill a void.
Looking for thoughts, recommendations or words of caution on this plan.
For those that are going to ask. Wood is dry as a bone and hard as a rock. I would like to keep it that way.
I really don't like having that much of a gap to fill with 4200 or 5200. The hole itself is about 1 1/4" and drilled a little off center so the plug plate does not sit directly in the middle.
Today I wil be filing the old screw holes after I clean them out since someone sealed them with silicone.
Anyway, I am considering coating a piece of PVC with mold release and putting it into the hole then filling around it with thickened epoxy. That way I would have an epoxy tube leading right to the end of the garboard plate so water could not get anywhere it's not supposed to be. I CANNOT get to the inside of the transom so everything will have to be done from the outside which is my biggest concern. If I could get to the inside I would probably fill the entire hole and redrill the entire thing.
Then I would use 5200 to seal the small gap instead of trying to fill a void.
Looking for thoughts, recommendations or words of caution on this plan.



For those that are going to ask. Wood is dry as a bone and hard as a rock. I would like to keep it that way.