• Boat repairs

    From Leon Warrington@21:1/5 to All on Fri May 7 03:46:26 2021
    Been refurbishing some older boats recently (think 1990's Janouseks / Sims etc.) to get them back out on the water.

    Any tips on the following?
    - repairing loose foot-stretcher holes so that screws have something solid to bind to;
    - repairing worn holes for seat tracks

    Thinking some kind of filler, any recommendations?

    Cheers,

    Leon.

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  • From Andy McKenzie@21:1/5 to Leon Warrington on Fri May 7 04:36:04 2021
    On Friday, 7 May 2021 at 11:46:28 UTC+1, Leon Warrington wrote:
    Been refurbishing some older boats recently (think 1990's Janouseks / Sims etc.) to get them back out on the water.

    Any tips on the following?
    - repairing loose foot-stretcher holes so that screws have something solid to bind to;
    - repairing worn holes for seat tracks

    Thinking some kind of filler, any recommendations?

    Cheers,

    Leon.

    Leon.

    Foot-stretcher holes you can (usually) get to the back of (at least on the sides) so either wood strip below the bearing plate or switching to a machine screw with nut and washer works. There's often a woodstrip fibreglassed into the hull where the
    central stretcher bearer sits, so filling the old holes and just screwing into fresh wood has worked for me, either by moving the bearer a cm or so, redrilling, or finding another bearer with different hole spacing. You could also drill out an oversized
    hole, epoxy in a wood dowel and then fit as normal - which might be a more elegant solution.

    For the slide beds, fill the old hole and redrill on a fresh bit of the bed. It's going to be rare that the positioning of slide mounting bolts really matters and they aren't really stressed. I have seen a quick and dirty approach for seat tracks that
    used a rawlplug (the ones designed for use with plasterboard that expand into the void) but that was on a scull with no access to the area under the slide beds, so a little quirky.

    The craftsmen will be along shortly to tell you how to do it properly, but I didn't buy all those shares in gaffer-tape for nothing!

    Andy

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  • From sully@21:1/5 to Leon Warrington on Fri May 7 05:36:38 2021
    On Friday, May 7, 2021 at 3:46:28 AM UTC-7, Leon Warrington wrote:
    Been refurbishing some older boats recently (think 1990's Janouseks / Sims etc.) to get them back out on the water.

    Any tips on the following?
    - repairing loose foot-stretcher holes so that screws have something solid to bind to;
    - repairing worn holes for seat tracks

    Thinking some kind of filler, any recommendations?

    I do this a lot on all my fleet of old singles, Maas, vespoli, janousek, kaschper, pococks, etc.

    footboard plates: typically the boats that I've worked on redoing track screw holes have a little extra room on the mounting platforms so sometimes I've just filled the holes and shifted the plates slightly fore or aft. yes a cheat. If I know I'll
    have really big people in it, I'll shift aft, or if it's a boat really small people will end up rowing shift to bow.

    for filling whether I reuse or shift I'll trim some small shavings of tongue depressor. I use a tube of thickened epoxy (stirred in some microballs), put a little into the hole, then stuff the hole with some of the splinters such that they hold
    themselves in place, then fill the rest of the way with the epoxy. Some boats have very thick mounting plates, some less thick that the holes are worn through such that epoxy you put into the hole will drop through to the bottom of the boat. I use a
    very thin long nail to probe to see if I have a bottom or not and tells me if I can fill it deep or just construct it. After it hardens, there may be a bump of extra wood or an epoxy bede to sand. Then drill, either shifting the plates a little or
    no, both plates that is.

    If I have a footboard plate screw strip and this boat is in daily use and need to get through another couple weeks until I can take it apart, dry it out and do properly, I'll simply take some of the tongue depressor splinters, shove them into the hole
    until tight, then screw in a slightly thicker or longer screw with the right head.

    tracks: If your boat builder didn't have grommets I would find some from another builder. It will make your future much better. Typically the hole in the deck where the grommet mounts enlarges. In boats where there is no grommet, the hole
    enlarges, and the underside of the deck gets all chewed up. This way, when you end up screwing the tracks down tight you're compressing against the plastic grommet and not crushing into the honeycomb.

    Make a paste of epoxy and microfiller again, I would take a piece of masking tape and attach to a piece of wax paper or plastic food baggie, then tape that on the underside of the hole. sand what you can underneath and wipe so the tape has a good
    grip. then fill, dry, pull the tape off the bottom and drill.

    mount the grommets with some marine caulk. I've seen some boats where manufacturers don't do this, prolly not necessary if your deck is not honeycomb.

    Don't know if this is the ideal ways but it's been successful for years for me, I like putting my repair techniques out there so better craftsmen than I can show better ways. The wood splinter fill is something I devised because no fill I ever used
    ever gave screws a good bite.









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  • From Leon Warrington@21:1/5 to sully on Mon May 10 01:10:38 2021
    Thanks to the useful tips both - I should be able to sort my issues out now.

    Cheers,

    Leon


    On Friday, 7 May 2021 at 13:36:40 UTC+1, sully wrote:
    On Friday, May 7, 2021 at 3:46:28 AM UTC-7, Leon Warrington wrote:
    Been refurbishing some older boats recently (think 1990's Janouseks / Sims etc.) to get them back out on the water.

    Any tips on the following?
    - repairing loose foot-stretcher holes so that screws have something solid to bind to;
    - repairing worn holes for seat tracks

    Thinking some kind of filler, any recommendations?
    I do this a lot on all my fleet of old singles, Maas, vespoli, janousek, kaschper, pococks, etc.

    footboard plates: typically the boats that I've worked on redoing track screw holes have a little extra room on the mounting platforms so sometimes I've just filled the holes and shifted the plates slightly fore or aft. yes a cheat. If I know I'll have
    really big people in it, I'll shift aft, or if it's a boat really small people will end up rowing shift to bow.

    for filling whether I reuse or shift I'll trim some small shavings of tongue depressor. I use a tube of thickened epoxy (stirred in some microballs), put a little into the hole, then stuff the hole with some of the splinters such that they hold
    themselves in place, then fill the rest of the way with the epoxy. Some boats have very thick mounting plates, some less thick that the holes are worn through such that epoxy you put into the hole will drop through to the bottom of the boat. I use a very
    thin long nail to probe to see if I have a bottom or not and tells me if I can fill it deep or just construct it. After it hardens, there may be a bump of extra wood or an epoxy bede to sand. Then drill, either shifting the plates a little or no, both
    plates that is.

    If I have a footboard plate screw strip and this boat is in daily use and need to get through another couple weeks until I can take it apart, dry it out and do properly, I'll simply take some of the tongue depressor splinters, shove them into the hole
    until tight, then screw in a slightly thicker or longer screw with the right head.

    tracks: If your boat builder didn't have grommets I would find some from another builder. It will make your future much better. Typically the hole in the deck where the grommet mounts enlarges. In boats where there is no grommet, the hole enlarges, and
    the underside of the deck gets all chewed up. This way, when you end up screwing the tracks down tight you're compressing against the plastic grommet and not crushing into the honeycomb.

    Make a paste of epoxy and microfiller again, I would take a piece of masking tape and attach to a piece of wax paper or plastic food baggie, then tape that on the underside of the hole. sand what you can underneath and wipe so the tape has a good grip.
    then fill, dry, pull the tape off the bottom and drill.

    mount the grommets with some marine caulk. I've seen some boats where manufacturers don't do this, prolly not necessary if your deck is not honeycomb.

    Don't know if this is the ideal ways but it's been successful for years for me, I like putting my repair techniques out there so better craftsmen than I can show better ways. The wood splinter fill is something I devised because no fill I ever used
    ever gave screws a good bite.

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)