[Public-list] Toe Rail Replacement &Hull/deck Joint
Jim & Carole
barchettamia at pinelink.org
Sun Jun 26 16:23:37 PDT 2005
George,
Thanks for your reply. It looks like you did a professional looking job
on your taffrail. I hope I am half as successful. When looking at the
pictures I thought I saw a step or uneven surface that the teak rests
on. Is that correct? If that is the case have to "rabbit" ( I think
thats the term) the taffrail.
A far as categorizing the emails, I made folders in my email account
for various topics and then selected the most informative letters to
add to the folder. I had begun to copy them to my documents as text
files but hadn't gotten to far along as I am a computer neophyte.
Jim
George Dinwiddie wrote:
> Jim & Carole wrote:
>
>> Furthermore the Deck / Hull joint has leaked for some time. Can
>> someone please advise as to the best or easeist way to remove the
>> toe rail. I thought of drilling out the plugs and exposing the
>> bolts but someone once wrote about grinding off the bolts by grinding
>> thru the rail and then , I assume , driving the bolts thru the deck
>> with a punch. Could someone please elborate?
>
>
> There's no reason why you can't break the existing toerail at the
> bolts and cut the heads off. You can still salvage the teak between
> the bolts for creating wooden plugs and for other small repairs.
>
>> Has anyone had experience replacing the taffrail?
>
>
> Take a look at
> http://alberg30.org/maintenance/disorganized/TaffrailReplacement/ and
> you'll find some photos I took when I replaced the taffrail.
>
> Sorry I've never found the time to organize them into a web page. If
> you wouldn't mind writing up a text description of the process, I'd be
> glad to turn it into a web page. You can just put the filenames of
> photos (mine or yours or a combination, your choice) in parenthesis
> where you'd like them to appear.
>
>> I would also appreciate any advise on repairing the deck/hull seam.
>> From what I recall from past emails it involves drilling out the alum
>> rivets and replacing with #10 bolts. I was thinking of using 5200 on
>> seam. I wonder if I will be able to separate the seam to remove the
>> existing adhesive. How much seam I should open at a time?
>
>
> The hull deck joint, at least on the newer boats, was sealed by laying
> a strip of wet glass mat between them, providing a weak but waterproof
> fiberglass joint. I chose to clean out any suspicious looking places
> with a screwdriver (as a chisel) from the outside and forcing 5200
> into the seam. I also bedded the #10 flathead screws with 5200. I
> used loctite green on the nuts, because I didn't think of it until
> after they were installed. If I were to do it over, I'd use nylock
> nuts, instead.
>
> I bedded the teak, itself, with 4200.
>
>> Finally, at one time I was able to access an archive of all emails
>> from the past. I don't recall how I did it or if its still
>> available. May be this a question for George.
>
>
> There are message archives
> (http://www.alberg30.org/pipermail/public-list/) going back to April
> 2004. The easiest way to find something is probably by using the
> site-wide search box found on most pages of the website. That merely
> uses Google to search the site, but includes the email archives. But
> always look at http://alberg30.org/maintenance/disorganized/ for
> photos, too, as Google can't easily index those.
>
> - George
>
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