T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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700.1 | which one?????? | HYEND::J_BORZUMATO | | Fri Jun 29 1990 12:51 | 3 |
| What brand of boat, does it have more than one windshield..
JIm.
|
700.2 | A very brief description | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Fri Jun 29 1990 13:40 | 12 |
| Jim,
Its a 22' Aquasport Walk Around Cuddy type. The windshield is
kind of generic for that style boat. There are two swing out vent/
windows at the bottom, two main glass pieces in front above the vents
and a triangular shaped window on each side. The frame is stainless and
extruded Aluminum.
The mounting may actually be done from inside the cuddy, although I
doubt it. That would result in the hardware being hidden by the
headliner. More likely there is some way to remove the right piece of
moulding and expose the screws/bolts or whatever.
Paul
|
700.3 | Call Grady White... | HYEND::J_BORZUMATO | | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:46 | 7 |
| Here's one thing i've found as the best thing to do.
Call the Mfgr. All i have called so far have technical people
aboard, that speak in plain clear english...
JIm
|
700.4 | I have mounting hardware inside the cuddy | DW90B::GUNNERSON | | Fri Jun 29 1990 14:46 | 8 |
| FWIW hardware under headliner isn't all that rare. My Sea Ray cuddy has
bolt that extend down through the deck. Nuts are attached from below.
THe whole area is covered with headliner material, so the little nuts
are hard to spot. The whole fuzzy mounting area is then covered with a
another board covered with headliner material which must be removed
first before you can get to the nuts.
john
|
700.5 | Bob has been through the winshield 8^) | SWAM3::SUKOVICH_RO | | Fri Jun 29 1990 18:02 | 14 |
| Hi;
I had some problems early in the ownership of my boat with the
windshield. Not leaking, but coming loose from doing 50 mph in 6 foot
seas. I found that the windshield is mounted by screws in the base . To
access these I had to disassemble the windshield from the top down. If
there is a walk thru or an edge to yours you might try to remove that
and see what that reveals. I am assuming that you are refering to
something that is made of an aluminum frame and held together by sheet
metal screws, the glass is held and insulated from vibration by rubber
trim . Maybe I could offer more insight by talking live. I'm on the
west coast therefore add or subtract for whatever time difference. I'm
at dtn 533-7618/7607 or 714-360-1266.
Good Luck
|
700.6 | Good Bet it's screwed through the cabin top | BIZNIS::CADMUS | | Mon Jul 02 1990 15:56 | 20 |
|
The only windshield I am aware of that has swing out vents on the
bottom is made by taylor. Every alum/stainless frame w/shield with
Glass (not plastic) I have seen has ms/s machine screws that bolt right
through the overhead and have teensy nuts and washers. THat is exactly
what IU have on my North American.
On the less expensive boats, the spray the flocking (fuzzy stuff)
right over the whole mess. In this case , getting the windshiels ou
makes and even bigger mess .
If you have a separarte headliner- get behind it and I'll bet you find
the nuts- once you get to them, the windshield can come off and be
reealed in a flash. I would use the white life -caulk or a good marine
bedding compound. I would stay away from the silicone caulk- that stuff
has never failed to fail me in a marine environment.
Dick
|
700.7 | Success...I think | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Mon Jul 09 1990 08:42 | 11 |
| Well I got the windshield off okay. As I suspected, I had to remove
some snap in moulding to expose the screw heads. It was attached with
wood screws versus machine screws. That was probably the cause of the
leak...screws loosening up over time. It had a rubber gasket under it
but it appeared to be inadequate. Anyway I laid down a nice messy bead
of Life-Caulk and reattached it with machine srews and lock nuts. Since
its raining up here I should have a good test of its tightness.
Thanks for all the hints,
Paul
|