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Author Topic: Boat repair.  (Read 1978 times)

Offline McCRIZZLEY

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Boat repair.
« on: May 30, 2014, 09:02:34 PM »
So I bought my first boat. Its a cheap little Styrofoam filled 2 person, with a plastic shell. I think It will be a rockin bass/duck boat. I took it out to kapowsin for the first time yesterday, and it is so old and brittle, it has a ton of cracks. the cracks let in water into the styrofoam middle. Floated just fine, but got too heavy to drag, let alone lift onto my jeep when I was done.

So needless to say, I am looking to patch all the cracks, quite the undertaking. This thing is old.

Any advice on how to go about it? Plastic welder? epoxy/glue/resin of some sort? Give up and buy a newer boat?

Online Bullkllr

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Re: Boat repair.
« Reply #1 on: May 30, 2014, 09:28:25 PM »
I will try to fix almost anything before buying new. Boats included.

"It has a ton of cracks"- So are you thinking you need to recover/refinish the entire surface?
If it soaked up that much water- it doesn't sound good. Really, the only thing I could imagine would be glassing over everything, probably with fabric and resin. That would be a great amount of work, and would likely add a ton of weight. Your time has value too- and what would the boat be worth in the long-run when you finish?

Realistically- you may need to start with a different boat. In my experience, structural parts like  seats, ribs, floors, stringers,even transoms are usually replaceable- but when you get into trying to fix widespread hull damage- things can get pretty dicey. Obvious "holes" would probably be easier to fix than the all-over cracking you described.

Good luck with whatever you decide.

Charlie Kirk didn't speak hate, they hated what he said. Don't get it twisted.

Offline McCRIZZLEY

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Re: Boat repair.
« Reply #2 on: May 30, 2014, 09:34:55 PM »
It is small and filled with foam, apparently even if it filled to the brim with water, it would still float, so safety is not a huge concern. I had not thought about glassing the whole bottom, as much work as that sounds like, I think that it may be easier than trying to spot every little crack and hole. good suggestion.

I did get the boat for cheap, but I am the same way, I would rather fix it then dispose of it.

Offline Romulus1297

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Re: Boat repair.
« Reply #3 on: May 30, 2014, 11:56:05 PM »
Find a cheap livingston and fix it might be cheaper, easier.

Offline biggfish

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Re: Boat repair.
« Reply #4 on: May 31, 2014, 12:40:42 AM »
I fixed a fiberglass shower shell with a tube of boat patching compound I bought at home depot. Its a white cream that dries hard maybe cover the hull with that after the core dries out.
Now then, get your equipment—your quiver and bow—and go out to the open country to hunt some wild game for me.  Gen. 27:3

Offline gasman

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Re: Boat repair.
« Reply #5 on: May 31, 2014, 11:06:14 AM »
I would probably, dry it out, fill the cracks with a thin layer of boat repair puddy or bondo, the put a layer of FG resign, a layer of FG cloth, then another layer of resign over it  :tup:

my  :twocents:
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It's 5 O'clock somewhere.......

Offline McCRIZZLEY

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Re: Boat repair.
« Reply #6 on: June 02, 2014, 07:36:40 PM »
Thanks for the input guys! I am leaning towards this full shell sealing idea. I will be sure to check out the boat patch stuff at hardware stores. I recently became unemployed, so it will have to wait a bit, but I will be sure to post updates.

 


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