tidclacy
Active member
Looking ahead to winter layup what is the best way to remove years of anti foul from my 11 ft wooden Clinker dinghy (West Wight Scow)
Even better, keep it wet.Mask to avoid dust,do it on plastic sheeting
I have never smoked, not even one cigarette. However most of last year was spent being treated for lung cancer with the removal of half of the left lung. OK its impossible to pin down the causes and my medics went for secondary smoking which given the environments I grew up and worked in is a reasonable assumption. However, looking back I also had a very cavalier attitude towards working on boats from the 60's onwards including stripping and applying antifouling, working with fibreglass and epoxy resins, solvent based glues, welding, etc. etc. I rarely used a face mask and then only in later years.Hood and positive pressure if you value your long term health.
Very sorry to hear that. But thanks for the lesson in health and safety with marine chemicals. I do it a lot, and have a powered filter system in a hood. Always used for antifoul and paint spraying, I might use a suitable mask and eye protection for applying epoxy, it’s less volatile, and I do it outdoors if I’m not wearing the helmet. Skin exposure also needs to be guarded. Gloves, a suit, shoe covers, plastic sleeves. Some of this stuff is seriously bad for us.I have never smoked, not even one cigarette. However most of last year was spent being treated for lung cancer with the removal of half of the left lung. OK its impossible to pin down the causes and my medics went for secondary smoking which given the environments I grew up and worked in is a reasonable assumption. However, looking back I also had a very cavalier attitude towards working on boats from the 60's onwards including stripping and applying antifouling, working with fibreglass and epoxy resins, solvent based glues, welding, etc. etc. I rarely used a face mask and then only in later years.
Take care.
Yes the handling of chemicals and dust was treated without much thought even by professionals and there was little info available……or ignored.In the boatbuilding business I saw countless people smoking whilst laminating grp….as an example.Although now on YouTube everyone wears a mask even if they are planning a bit of wood or paintingVery sorry to hear that. But thanks for the lesson in health and safety with marine chemicals. I do it a lot, and have a powered filter system in a hood. Always used for antifoul and paint spraying, I might use a suitable mask and eye protection for applying epoxy, it’s less volatile, and I do it outdoors if I’m not wearing the helmet. Skin exposure also needs to be guarded. Gloves, a suit, shoe covers, plastic sleeves. Some of this stuff is seriously bad for us.
Indeed. My very first job, before going to university, was in a laboratory doing various tests on Coal Tar. We routinely heated coal tar, bitumen and various additives over open flames in the open laboratory. We also used vast quantities of Trichloroethylene, Xylene and Acetone. There was a mercury distillation apparatus in one corner of the lab; it was one of my jobs to tend it! There was a perennial smell of phenols in the air. We used asbestos gloves to handle hot apparatus. Looking back, it all seems horribly unsafe! But my only injury waas caused by a physical accident (finger got between hammer and anvil!)Yes the handling of chemicals and dust was treated without much thought even by professionals and there was little info available……or ignored.In the boatbuilding business I saw countless people smoking whilst laminating grp….as an example.Although now on YouTube everyone wears a mask even if they are planning a bit of wood or painting
Oh so true, causes problems for years.Don't use chemical stripper on a clinker boat, especially if riveted. It will hide in the corners and between the planks and reactivate when it gets damp.