girlfriday
New Member
Late last year I acquired a 12 foot wooden clinker-built Tideway sailing dinghy, which I am currently getting ready for sailing this year.
She had been out of the water for at least a year when I got her and consequently was pretty dried out. We made one attempt to sail her which had to be aborted as not surprisingly, she leaked like a basket! After that, on the advice of some people in the Tideway owners association, we tried running water through her for a few days and eventually she took up nicely and proved we have got a boat which might eventually float. This was in September and she has been in a dryish garage ever since.
Some of her varnish is in a pretty bad state and I am planning to strip back to bare wood in the worst places before painting below the waterline and revarnishing above.
My question is: would there be any benefit in repeating the soaking treatment before painting/revarnishing, or would this be a bad thing to do? The reason I am thinking it might be a good idea is that by allowing the wood to swell more before painting I would minimise the movement in the wood after painting and hence the possibility of the paint cracking. The reason I am worried it might be a bad idea is that it could trap moisture in the wood and lead to rot.
Basically, I suspect the wood is still in a drier state than it will be once she is being sailed regularly - it it bad to paint while in this state, or not?
Many thanks to anyone who can advise....!
She had been out of the water for at least a year when I got her and consequently was pretty dried out. We made one attempt to sail her which had to be aborted as not surprisingly, she leaked like a basket! After that, on the advice of some people in the Tideway owners association, we tried running water through her for a few days and eventually she took up nicely and proved we have got a boat which might eventually float. This was in September and she has been in a dryish garage ever since.
Some of her varnish is in a pretty bad state and I am planning to strip back to bare wood in the worst places before painting below the waterline and revarnishing above.
My question is: would there be any benefit in repeating the soaking treatment before painting/revarnishing, or would this be a bad thing to do? The reason I am thinking it might be a good idea is that by allowing the wood to swell more before painting I would minimise the movement in the wood after painting and hence the possibility of the paint cracking. The reason I am worried it might be a bad idea is that it could trap moisture in the wood and lead to rot.
Basically, I suspect the wood is still in a drier state than it will be once she is being sailed regularly - it it bad to paint while in this state, or not?
Many thanks to anyone who can advise....!