Greenheart
Well-Known Member
If you've all finished your dinners, here's a photo of a section of my transom as it is at present. The pink foam is what I stuffed into the pipes to prevent water entering...
...I'm sorry, but you were warned, earlier.
It's a rotten job of fairing and finishing, because late in the summer, I was much more concerned with sealing the drain-tubes into the transom, so the rear compartment could stay dry and I could launch, than how she'd look. So, lots of Sikaflex got in there, lots of thickened epoxy, and a fair bit of paint in a weak attempt to hide the hideousness.
The nasty brittle yellow layers of epoxy-overspill need scraping off, and those ply rectangles need either sanding smooth or re-covering with a shiny smooth, thin, rigid outer facing which the Mylar flap can snap shut against when I pull a length of light shock-cord from the cockpit.
The whole hull wants several careful days' work with rubbing compound to shift stains and tyre-marks. That photo is just a specially nasty bit, and one which most urgently needs finishing because when the pipes are opened, the sea cometh in. Not all the time - the transom drains are several inches above the working waterline - but it still comes in.
Worth remembering that I hope to spend a few calm nights aboard this summer, weather permitting. No fun waking up in a wet sleeping bag. I'll keep the foam squares for stuffing in the cockpit ends of the tubes.
...I'm sorry, but you were warned, earlier.
It's a rotten job of fairing and finishing, because late in the summer, I was much more concerned with sealing the drain-tubes into the transom, so the rear compartment could stay dry and I could launch, than how she'd look. So, lots of Sikaflex got in there, lots of thickened epoxy, and a fair bit of paint in a weak attempt to hide the hideousness.
The nasty brittle yellow layers of epoxy-overspill need scraping off, and those ply rectangles need either sanding smooth or re-covering with a shiny smooth, thin, rigid outer facing which the Mylar flap can snap shut against when I pull a length of light shock-cord from the cockpit.
The whole hull wants several careful days' work with rubbing compound to shift stains and tyre-marks. That photo is just a specially nasty bit, and one which most urgently needs finishing because when the pipes are opened, the sea cometh in. Not all the time - the transom drains are several inches above the working waterline - but it still comes in.
Worth remembering that I hope to spend a few calm nights aboard this summer, weather permitting. No fun waking up in a wet sleeping bag. I'll keep the foam squares for stuffing in the cockpit ends of the tubes.