Jim@sea
Well-Known Member
I may be moving back from Power Boats to Sail and due to budget I am looking at boats of 35 years of age.
OK I can understand osmosis as I once bought a 1973 yacht in 1982 and the hull had already been treated (33ft Ketch. Finland)
And the boat magazines are full of adverts for Osmosis Specialists.
But the boat I looked at last week had a slightly flexible deck, presumably balsa core, and I wondered how it is treated.
Can you drill small holes in the deck and pour in fibreglass resin.
What is the treatment. ? Or do boats reach a "sell by date"
I looked at a boat last week (1978) where in a force 8 the deck started splitting because the "Chain Plates" started pulling through and the boat broker showed me the bills which cost over £12,000. ( so that boat is not for me) but the surveyors report says that the wood underneath was "rotten" Is that what you can expect for a 35 year old boat.
Over to you.
Ps In 1978 I bought a New Moody 30. So its not as if sailing is new to me.
OK I can understand osmosis as I once bought a 1973 yacht in 1982 and the hull had already been treated (33ft Ketch. Finland)
And the boat magazines are full of adverts for Osmosis Specialists.
But the boat I looked at last week had a slightly flexible deck, presumably balsa core, and I wondered how it is treated.
Can you drill small holes in the deck and pour in fibreglass resin.
What is the treatment. ? Or do boats reach a "sell by date"
I looked at a boat last week (1978) where in a force 8 the deck started splitting because the "Chain Plates" started pulling through and the boat broker showed me the bills which cost over £12,000. ( so that boat is not for me) but the surveyors report says that the wood underneath was "rotten" Is that what you can expect for a 35 year old boat.
Over to you.
Ps In 1978 I bought a New Moody 30. So its not as if sailing is new to me.