T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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839.1 | Start over again? | MTBLUE::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Wed May 18 1988 09:09 | 29 |
| Ron,
Its sounds as though you may be off to a bad start. If I understand
your description correctly you must have a fairly thick patch on
the outside of the hull. If this is the case I don't know how to
effect an estetically pleasing finish. I think you may be better
off grinding it all down flush to the hull and finishing with gel
coat. The structural integrety should come from the patch on the
inside of the hull.
If you were starting from the original hole in the hull I would
recommend that you bridge over the hole from the inside. I would
use several layers of woven glass rather than matting. The void
between the patch and the external hull surface could be filled
with a mixture of chopped fibre and resin followed by Marine Tex
and finally gel coat. The plan is for the final gel coat layer (which
is fairly thin) to just come up to or slightly excede the hull surface
so that it can be feathered into a fair surface.
Starting from where you are now, I would grind off the excess
on both sides and lay in a woven glass patch on the inside. On the
ouside I would probably over grind a bit to form a slight depression
then fair it with gel coat or Marine Tex/gel coat.
The preceding procedure is only my description of how I would
attack the problem. I am a self taught hull patcher with limited
experience so don't take my word as gospel. I would suggest investing
in one of the many books on the subject and also talking to several
people to get multiple opinions.
I hope this helped more than discouraged you.
Paul
|
839.2 | options?? | HAVOC::GREEN | | Thu May 19 1988 14:53 | 18 |
| Paul,
I thought of that and did get discouraged when looking at the original
problem. There are 4 layers of woven glass inside covering the
hole - the hole as cleaned out and cut to solid glass. My sense
at the time was that this would hold fine, but I needed a better
exterior to prevent peeling back of more woven glass.
Perhaps Gel-coat instead of the MARINE - TEX might be the answer.
Any tips of gel-coat? Apply with a brush? spray? plastic spatula?
Never seen the stuff in its liquid (paste?) form. Time needed
to apply and cure??
Thanks again,
Ron
|
839.3 | some more comments | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu May 19 1988 15:34 | 25 |
| >>> There are 4 layers of woven glass inside covering the
>>> hole - the hole as cleaned out and cut to solid glass. My sense
>>> at the time was that this would hold fine, but I needed a better
>>> exterior to prevent peeling back of more woven glass.
A couple of comments: Usually fiberglass is laid in alternating layers
of woven fabric and mat. Adjacent layers of fabric don't adhere well --
adjacent layers of fabric and mat adhere much better. The edges of the
hole need to be ground at a very shallow angle to maximize the bonding
area (just like scarfing wood).
From your description, it sounds like the hull may have delaminated in
vicinity of the hole -- ie, the bond between the layers of fabric or
fabric/mat has broken. This is the usual situation. Shine a very bright
light through the hull. If the hull has a milky appearance near the hole
but not elsewhere, then there is probably delamination. If there is,
you'll have to grind out the delaminated area as well. Gel coat has
virtually no structural strength -- its function is to provide a glossy,
pretty surface and to protect the underlying fiberglass from ultraviolet
degradation.
Epoxy resin is both stronger and easier to work with than polyester
resin and epoxy bonds well to cured, sanded polyester (but not visa
versa).
|
839.4 | keep sanding | MILVAX::HO | | Tue May 24 1988 16:37 | 13 |
| As far as making Marine Tex presentable, just keep sanding with
progressively finer grits of wet dry until the patch is feathered
in with the surrounding gel coat. The color may not match but the
patch should not discernable by touch. With rubbing compound, Marine
Tex can be made to shine as much as gel coat.
Another way to tell if the hull is delaminating around the patch
is to tap it with your hand. If there is delamination, the tone
should sound much softer than the distinct sound from an area known
to be solid. When the boat is hauled, a delaminated area will often
leach fluid for weeks afterwards.
|
839.5 | use expoxy paint | AKOV11::KALINOWSKI | | Tue Jun 14 1988 20:19 | 11 |
| grind it down with progessively finer paper. I ussally get down
to about 200 grit. Instead of screwing around with gel-coat,
get some two part expoxy paint and feather in a couple of very
thin coats. Wait a couple of weeks and wax the area. You will never
know the difference. I covered a white marine tex patch with yellow
expoxy paint, and the only way you would have know it is for me
to point it out to you from 6 inches away on a really sunny day.
john
|
839.6 | But wait a minute, fiberglass can't rot.... | MFGMEM::KEENAN | PAUL KEENAN DTN 297-7332 | Mon Feb 12 1990 17:11 | 23 |
| I have delamination on my balsa cored deck. The area is about the
size of your hand, it's soft and swelled up.
I want to remove the damaged layers and build it back up. I'm looking
for advice on how to do this:
* Good tools to dig/grind out the damaged area
* What do you build it back up with - cloth? matt? balsa?
* What kind of resin to use - polyester? epoxy?
* Any tricks to make the new gelcoat match the old non-skid surface
Also, practically all my deck fittings are located wrong for
racing and must be moved. Any prefered methods for filling in
old bolt holes?
Thanks for any advice,
Paul
|
839.7 | a start | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Mon Feb 12 1990 17:55 | 33 |
| Can you see the underside of the deck (ie, no headliner in the way)? If
the balsa coring looks black, it's rotting and/or has water in it. Ugh.
If the deck has swelled, you may have a rather large problem. I'd be
surprised it the problem is limited to the swollen area. Take a plastic
hammer and start tapping the deck well away from the problem area.
You'll hear a distinctly different sound where the deck is delaminated
and the core wet.
The top fiberglass skin is (on my boat anyway) the thicker skin. My
choice would be to attack the problem from below if at all possible. I'd
use a saber saw or sawzall to cut the fiberglass skin. If you do this
from below, you eliminate gelcoat color matching problems but create the
problem of working overhead. Remove all the wet/rotted balsa. Replace
with new balsa. Relaminate with polyester (perhaps the builder will give
you the matt/cloth layup schedule -- if not, alternate cloth and matt).
Alternatively, you could grind away the fiberglass skin (which makes
lots of not good for your health dust, so use breathing protection).
If you do this from above, matching the existing gelcoat and non-skid
may not be feasible (at any reasonable cost). When our deck delamination
was repaired, we didn't even think about matching, especially since
several areas, one maybe 12" x 36", were redone. The factory non-skid
was sanded, and then all the non-skid areas were painted with Awlgrip
with non-skid stuff mixed in. Excellent non-skid, but very hard to keep
clean. We don't mind -- the factory non-skid was very slippery.
Fill old bolt holes with epoxy. Seal all new holes with epoxy, too.
Drill the holes oversize, fill with resin, and redrill after the resin
cures. Tedious, but worth it.
Oh yes, have you had a surveyor look at your deck? Might be worth the
investment.
|
839.8 | Could be trouble | AKOV12::DJOHNSTON | | Mon Feb 12 1990 18:43 | 19 |
| On the odd chance the delam is restricted to the area you can see, the
job may be a bit easier. First, do as Alan says and check from the
bottom to see if the balsa has rotted a lot. If it is only a bit and
you are convinced you don't have a major problem it is possible ( in
small areas) to inject epoxy under the skin and saturate the balsa in
that area. The main problem is weight just where you don't want it,
high on deck.
Do yourself a favor and get it surveyed. Those guys will outline the
delam areas for you and have tons of experience judging how bad your
problem is. If you tell him you only want the deck looked at I bet the
job will be very reasonably priced.
As for old holes, use Marine-Tex or some epoxy filler. Over fill the
hole as it will shrink a bit. Then sand. Or don't sand. Depends how
picky you are about your deck's appearance. Ours looks like swiss
cheese.
Dave
|
839.9 | | STEREO::HO | | Tue Feb 13 1990 09:09 | 40 |
| If this is your J-24, you don't have a headliner to worry about so it
should be possible to access the damaged area from below. I'd suggest
trying to retain the top layer of laminate since the non-skid is molded
in and can't be replicated unless you're a fanatic X-acto knife artist.
The WEST epoxy people have a free brochure on fiberglass repairs that
show how to fix delaminations. The procedure is to drill holes in the
damaged area, inject resin, press the glass back onto the core by
putting weights on top, sand, and paint. It may be possible to modify
the procedure by drilling in from below and injecting up into the core
and then proceding as before.
As a starter, I'd drill weep holes from below to allow the area to
drain. Then check the topside for unsealed holes, cracks, etc. where
water might have gotten in. These should be fixed first to prevent
recurrence. Poorly filled or bedded fitting holes are prime suspects.
Give it a month or more to dry out and ventilate the boat adequately
to promote good air circulation. If the discolored fluid stops oozing
and the area seems reasonably firm, the injection method may work. You
may need cinder blocks on top and 2 X 4's braced below to persuade the
laminate sections to rejoin.
If it's really soft and fluid keeps weeping out of the drain holes
after a month, it's probably time to remove the lower layer of
laminate. Believe it or not this can be done by scoring an outline of
the damaged area with a sharp razor blade or utility knife. Just keep
going over it until you penetrated the glass, which will be
surprisingly thin, and then pry it off. If the core is seriously
rotted, there won't be much holding it on. Scrap out the mess that's
been revealed, dry the resulting hole out, and re-laminate with new
balsa. The surface can be finished as desired. If you're fussy, paint
or gelcoat can be sprayed to closely approximate the original
appearance. Much easier on the inside since it's not patterned. Also,
booboo's don't show since no one in his right mind goes below a J-24.
Good thing you're going move a lot of fittings. This will give the
chance to re-bed everything. Got a bit of this to do on my own boat in
a few months. Not looking forward to it.
- gene
|
839.10 | | MFGMEM::KEENAN | PAUL KEENAN DTN 297-7332 | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:22 | 18 |
| Thanks for all the info!
Yes, the boat is a J/24. When my brother and I were looking it over
two years ago, we noticed a 4" crease in the deck with new gel coat
on top. The seller told us that an anchor had been dropped there -
nothing to worry about.
Well last season the gelcoat patch cracked open and the crease started
rising up. We tried to limit the damage by adding more gelcoat but it
kept cracking. Some tapping of the area revealed the problem is not
very widespread, the area is a ridge about 5" x 2".
Since the non-skid is already gone in the damaged area and I want to
get rid of the ridge - is there still an advantage to attacking from
the bottom? Also I'm hoping the damage is not very deep, is this
wishful thinking?
Paul
|
839.11 | | STEREO::HO | | Tue Feb 13 1990 12:55 | 20 |
| Sounds like you're the ideal candidate for a WEST injection cure, if
the balsa core is not too far gone. If the tops already a mess, may as
well do the repair from that side. When you drill out the holes,
inspect core shaving that come out. If you encounter black liquid and
little solid material, forget the injection cure and just score and
peel back the top layer.
Once water has penetrated the topskin, which is only slightly more than
a millimeter thick, core deterioration will start and continue unless
there's somewhere for the moisture to go. The core is placed with the
vertical grain perpendicular to the deck. Once water gets in, it
penetrates all the way to the bottom layer. If you have to replace
balsa core, is easiest to remove the entire thickness of old core and
to replace it with a full thickness of new wood. If the damaged patch
isn't real large, you can just use a putty of resin and lightweight
filler in lieu of balsa. For a small area on my own boat, I got lazy
one time and just poured resin into the cavity and just let it harden
before glassing over it. It's held so far.
- gene
|
839.12 | A little more | JUPITR::KTISTAKIS | Mike K. | Tue Feb 13 1990 15:22 | 10 |
| Let me kick it a little further so the education is more complete.
At least mine.What about during the fabrication of the deck, the topskin
wasn't "glued" very well to the balsa and after a couple of years the
topskin,starts lifting and showing a bouble on deck.Does that mean
that somehow water went under? Now let me transalate the question from
Greek if I can.
Could the swelling on deck be bad workmanship or it has to be shippage
of water that indicates delamination or rot? And if it is the former
how do you know so you don't start making holes.Could any untrained
ear will understand the tapping of the HAMMER near the swell?
|
839.13 | | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Tue Feb 13 1990 15:32 | 13 |
| re -.1:
Delamination may be due to improper gluing of the balsa to the outer
skin during building (which was the cause of our delamination), it may
be caused by thermal stress (in the tropics the expansion of the deck,
especially a dark colored deck, may be enough to break the balsa bond),
it may be caused by water getting into the deck and rotting the wood.
Our deck was repaired, in part, by injecting resin. Some of the resin
went a long ways and came out of some holes in the inner skin quite far
from where it was injected (moral: keep all holes in the deck well
sealed). Yes, the sound change from good deck to delaminated deck is
quite distinctive.
|
839.14 | Thank God for Gougeon Brothers | MFGMEM::KEENAN | PAUL KEENAN DTN 297-7332 | Mon Apr 30 1990 13:35 | 21 |
|
Here's what happened with my "delaminated" deck.
As I cut down into my 6" deck crack, I found nothing but mush.
Total core rot out - it looked like beef stew. The rotted area was an 8" x 8"
plywood cored section under a lifeline stantion.
It seems the water seeped in through the stantion base bolts and saturated
the plywood. Unlike the surrounding balsa, the plywood grain runs horizontal -
a perfect sponge. So the crack in the deck was a symptom not the cause of the
rot.
After drying, I layed in a new plywood core and several layers of cloth,
West System epoxy, and high strength filler. This brought the level to just
below the existing deck. For a non-skid surface, I followed the West System
method. I made a pattern of good nonskid deck, then pressed it down like a mold
onto a final layer of epoxy and colloidal silica over the patch.
It came out nice!
Paul
|
839.15 | WEST Phone number and book reference | MQOSWS::M_CHEVRIER | Michel A. Chevrier 632-3707 Montr�al | Thu Apr 15 1993 09:58 | 14 |
| Does anyone can provide the WEST phone number
to get the brochure .9 is refering to?
I rented the two videos someone refered to in here
and yes they are very good but do not cover the
exact need I have.
Can someone suggest a book on fiberglass repair,
I went to my local library and could not find
a single one that talks about fiberglass repairs.
Thanks,
Michel.
|
839.16 | | DNEAST::POMERLEAU_BO | | Thu Apr 15 1993 10:52 | 1 |
| WEST SYSTEM (517) 684-7286
|
839.17 | | UNIFIX::BERENS | Alan Berens | Fri Apr 23 1993 18:02 | 2 |
| Alan Vaitses wrote an excellent book on repairing fiberglass books.
Available from International Marine Publishing and elsewhere, no doubt.
|
839.18 | LAKES REGION FIBERGLAS? | USDEV::OLSALT::DARROW | I'd rather be messin' about in a Boat! | Tue Nov 16 1993 12:44 | 68 |
|
One month ago today, I went up to Jubilee Yacht Club in Beverly
to possibly take a short sail on WINDSONG. The harbor was fogged
in, but I took the launch out anyway to prep the boat for hauling
the next Saturday.
When I went below, I noticed that the 'white' VHF radio was
mostly JET BLACK!
I stepped back into the cockpit to checked the top of the mast
and sure enough, the base coil for the antenna was just a small
nub with a bit of wire hanging from it and the Windex was down
across the top of the mast.
I went back in the cabin and stuck my head down under the cockpit
to check the main fuse and discovered water around the battery. I
also could here some clunking on the other side of the plywood
bulkhead in the cockpit locker.
After checking under the cabin sole and finding more water, I
went out in the cockpit and opened the locker to find more than a
foot of water with all the fenders etc. floating around. It was
about 1 inch below the top of the fiberglas portion of the
bulkhead between the locker and the cabin. The water in the cabin
was a result of the water in the locker sloshing up over the
Fiberglas bulkhead and seeping down behind the plywood partition.
The rear portion of the quarter berth cushions were also soaked.
Seems the lightning had come down the vhf lead and the mast light
wires. Where there was a dip in the vhf lead some of the energy
exited taking some gelcoat with it about 4 inches above the water
line. It seems that the intense heat from the lightning causes
the residual moisture in the Fiberglas to literally explode.
The VHF and my antique Sitex Loran were fried. From here the
energy went every where. The bow light was blown off. The stern
light was blown out and where the loran antenna lead went down
across the bottom of the cockpit locker there were several more
exit points. One of them bad enough to allow the water to enter.
Dan Rutherford of Ocean Marine Specialties was assigned by BOAT
US and he showed up at 8:00am the next morning.(Sunday) and spent
3 hours helping me de-rig the boat and making an inventory of the
damage.
Dan has suggested LAKES REGION FIBERGLAS in Belmont NH just
south of Laconia on route 140. Has anyone had any experience
with these folks?
My experience with Ocean Marine has been good, and BOAT US
guarantees the work of approved vendors. I am prepared to tow the
boat up there but would be more comfortable after hearing of some
first (or second) hand experience.
One of the reasons for the suggestion of Lakes Region Fg was that
they have the special equipment to turn the boat over without
stressing the hull in order to work on the bottom.
When the hull work is done, we will be interested in
recommendations for some one in the Marblehead to Cape Ann area to
do the electrical work. The boat is to be completely rewired as
well as replacement of all of the exterior light fixtures.
For any body in the MRO area, I have a set of pictures in the
office.
Thanks, Fred
|
839.19 | They seem to have lots of business... | MASTR::FRENCH | Bill French 381-1859 | Tue Nov 16 1993 18:13 | 13 |
| Fred,
I haven't dealt with them myself, but whenever I go by, there are
tons of boats there being worked on. I believe they do the fibreglass
work for my boatyard (Fay's) which suggests quality work. It looks
like a pretty good sized operation.
If the insuror suggests them, I'd go with it.
Regards,
Bill
|
839.20 | | AKO539::KALINOWSKI | | Wed Nov 17 1993 12:43 | 13 |
| RE .19
I believe one of the guys here had his cruiser fixed there when a tree fell on
it (he had pulled the boat for safety in Hurricane Bob). The work
was really well done. Les is in Thailand for a couple of months, but
I'll send him a note to make sure it is the same guy. Judging by the
directions, it sure sounds like him.
If it is, you can also ask if he will keep the boat over the winter.
That will save you winter storage charges toward the deductible..
john
|