[Public-list] Leaky Deck joints
FINNUS505 at aol.com
FINNUS505 at aol.com
Fri Nov 12 19:57:50 PST 2004
Hey,
Stargazer had some deck leaks along the toe rail. She has the vertical
toerail. We had to keep anything in the lockers in waterproof plastic bags. Last
season I put a narrow bead of 3M 4200 in the inboard seam between the toe rail
and deck, and that stopped all the rain leaks. She still leaks when we sail
and heel over, so I have to do the outboard seam, as Mike describes below.
I'll do that this spring, before we paint the topsides.
To caulk the inboard seam, first I cleaned the area where the caulk was to
go of any old caulk that was protruding out, then gave it a quick rub down with
220 grit paper, and then a wipe with turpentine on a rag. Then I masked,
putting one piece 1/8 inch inboard from the rail on the deck, and another 1/8"
above the seam on the toerail. A narrow bead from the caulking gun, filleted
to shape with a gloved finger, and that was that.
Hope this helps,
Lee
Stargazer #255
In a message dated 11/12/2004 2:52:51 PM Eastern Standard Time,
capricebob at yahoo.com writes:
Thanks for the info. Caprice is thru bolted so I shall give it a shot and
hopefully it will mitigate or stop all together the water coming in.
Thanks again!
Bobby
Caprice #380
Mike Lehman <sail_505 at hotmail.com> wrote:
A quick fix is to dig out the cauking from both sides of the toerail and
re-caulking the joint. If your boat has a SS rub rail, it means removing
that and cleaning up the joint. That is probably all you have to do.
If your boat has a flat cap rail [instead of a stand-up toe rail] check
underneath [inside the boat] to see if the deck/hull joint is thru-bolted or
fastened with pop-rivets. If it is pop-riveted and has the flat cap rail,
then the permament fix is to remove the cap rail, drill out the rivets, and
replace them with #10 flat-head bolts re-caulking as you go. It sounds like
a bigger job than it is, but it requires 2 people and a lot of patience
removing the rail so you can reuse it, and a couple of days of work putting
everything back together.
In either case the mast does not need to be removed.
Mike Lehman
><((((º>¸.·´¯`·...¸><((((º>
----Original Message Follows----
From: robert robicheaux
Reply-To: Alberg 30 Public List -- open to all
To: alberg list
Subject: [Public-list] Leaky Deck joints
Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2004 06:56:19 -0800 (PST)
Hello Everyone,
Seems like I have a leaky deck/hull joint. It may be just the thru bolts or
it may be the joint itself or both.
Has anyone rebed their boat's deck/hull joint?
Do you need to remove the mast to do this project properly?
Is there a quick fix that might last the season? I'm currently heading
south.
I would appreciate any suggestions or tips.
Thanks,
Bobby
1100318270.0
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