Butyl tape?

Allan

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In the many threads about bedding deck gear I've seen butyl tape mentioned and I've decided to give it a try. I'll be rebeding two bow cleats and the windlass. Is this the stuff I should use?
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Allan
 
From the photo that looks like it's the right stuff. However from my experience I recommend caution as not all butyl tape is created equal.

I have used four different varieties on my boat. Two failed miserably, one was fine, one excellent.

I purchased the best from a US marine service and products agent who has butyl tape specially formulated and it shows. The ones that failed were purchased from a caravan/RV center. They offered black, white and gray, all from different sources. I purchased some of each with the plan to use appropriate colors for different bits and locations. The white and the black completely failed in about a year. Dried out, turned to powder and had to be replaced. The gray held up and still seems to be working.

I went back to the shop to get some more gray and had a talk with an old timer that worked in the repair shop. He informed me that they only sold the white and black because customers insisted for color matching reasons and it was cheaper but the only one he would use was the gray.

The really good stuff is sold as Bed-It tape by Compass Marine in the US but the owner has been in hospital and has not been shipping lately. There is one reseller of his product in Canada, Marine Outfitters. Probably some very good sources in the UK but regret I can't refer you to any over there.
 
In the many threads about bedding deck gear I've seen butyl tape mentioned and I've decided to give it a try. I'll be rebeding two bow cleats and the windlass. Is this the stuff I should use?
Search
Allan
That looks fine just make sure it is the right dimensions for your use. If it is not you can pull an amount off and just roll it between your hands to a sausage shape for forming as a gasket. Once to secure the fitting you are sealing you will get some surplus squeezing out but this can be removed easily with a plastic body filler applicator or an old bank card.
 
Looks right as it is intended for damp proofing. I have used butyl rubber for lots of fittings. The day after fitting you may find a small amount of sqeeze out. Trim it off with a sharp knife. Any that may leave a small thin residue can be wiped off with a little white spirit on kitchen paper.
 
Albin Ballads are sealed with it. It continues to come out of the hull/ deck joint each time you tighten the bolts up.
I sealed some items with it, and others with sikaflex, after 3 years there was no difference in leaks. It has the huge advantage of an easy clean up if you have to remove fittings.
For something pristine, you will often have black smudges from it magically appearing around the boat.
A ball of it doesn't go off for years, sikaflex tubes are toast within days once opened. I only used cheap grey stuff off ebay. The original was grey too.
You do need a grove for it to sit in, or it is all squeezed out.

Good stuff.

Mike
 
I needed to rebed a deck chainplate and put a post on a rigging focussed Facebook group on this very subject. There were many responses with the consensus split equally with some suggesting butyl tape and others swearing by Sika 291i (which I went for and hasn't caused me any reason to regret so far).
 
I needed to rebed a deck chainplate and put a post on a rigging focussed Facebook group on this very subject. There were many responses with the consensus split equally with some suggesting butyl tape and others swearing by Sika 291i (which I went for and hasn't caused me any reason to regret so far).
The advantage of using butyl is that it can be easily dismantled and resealed whereas sika is a pig to remove.
 
I have just used that to help the deck seal for our keel stepped mast. It is very sticky as long as there is no trace of water on the items you are sealing.
I have also used it for sealing screwed and bolted fittings to the deck.
Remains flexible unlike sika.
Ideal for bedding windows.
A roll also came in very handy as a bandage when my exhaust elbow blew and got me back from Scotland to North Wales when combined with a couple of jubilee clips.
 
I've used Butyl tape for a variety of purposes, bedding perspex windows(with stainless washers at the bolt/screws), bedding deck fittings, bedding through hull fittings etc. Originally used fitting double glazed glass in wooden windows in house extension.
 
I've used the Toolstation one for its intended purpose and it is very sticky.

On boat used the Arbo tape under deck fittings with no problems at all.

Arbo is a bit easier to handle as it's narrower and thicker than the Toolstation one.
 
By the sound/look of it, the Toolstation one isn’t a ‘glazing’ profile (the ideal shape/size for bedding deck fittings - or cutting in half for sealing fasteners). So it may be advisable for the OP to keep looking…
 
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