Saturday, January 30, 2010

Boat With Screws Through Bottom Small Dinghy Which Is Fibreglass. There Are Drill Holes In Bottom. What Should I Do To Fill The Holes In?

Small dinghy which is fibreglass. There are drill holes in bottom. What should I do to fill the holes in? - boat with screws through bottom

Hello, I have a small boat which is old and worn. Were drawn to the beaches of rock for years, so helmets worn, so we get a few small patches of fiberglass and bronze, but stretches over more than 3 rows from the floor. Anyway, drilled holes in the hull, so that the metal screw. We had put a piece of wood in the boat, because he is too thin to hold a screw. Anyway, now filtered through the holes and a hole is drilled completely contrived. What should I do, I tried to put silicone in their fleet, but to leave. Fibrelgass not work in small areas that will be filtered as well, and after a year. Ideas?

4 comments:

mark t said...

Tapes wood, fiberglass (brokers), which had holes and copper strips. Bevel the edges of the wood with no sharp edges and the use of multiple layers of glass. Then you can attach the metal strips on the lumberjack beds Silicon marine.

mark t said...

Tapes wood, fiberglass (brokers), which had holes and copper strips. Bevel the edges of the wood with no sharp edges and the use of multiple layers of glass. Then you can attach the metal strips on the lumberjack beds Silicon marine.

rutager said...

make the silicon strip and clean the floor and out of the holes a little bigger

techniglue use a marine epoxy glue to dry all your holes to fill, and make a series of tests to make sure that you have achieved

Sand behind the tapes and cassettes of the areas will be clean with turpentine

with urethane adhesive Sikaflex 971 or equivilant-(much better than silicon) are free of the bonds down your boat

hold firmly in place with duct tape and clean the excess with alcohol can dry

Let's live like this adhesive is more than enough to celebrate, if you have to think also saw a seal to the top

justanot... said...

Marine-Tex waterproof 2-part epoxy that dries in minutes of hard rock, strong as steel, placed on a series of layers, and go, it's only bear a dirty, that "the PFP."

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