howardclark
Well-Known Member
This year I am having to recaulk a lot of seams but over the years where I have real damage to repair is where fittings are through bolted and ply has gone soft.
I have a new cunning plan and am wondering if anyone can point out obvious flaws,
A good example is one I will be repairing this week. The boom gallows is bolted through with 4 M6 bolts each end. At one end the ply is shot and investigation has shown the mastic has failed and rather than water going all the way through ( which would have been seen & resolved) , it has tracked into the ply and I have to replace a 6x8” piece.
The problem is that the wood, mastic and metal all have their own their own reactions to temperature and moisture.
I am not a nerd but do have a 3d printer. I have printed some 8mm sleeves (8mm I/d 6mm/od) in ABS, purchased epoxy which is compatible with plastic, and intend to fit the sleeves into the teak & sub deck. The bolts can then fit neatly through the sleeves, probably just with silicone. The plastic will have far less expansion than the metal, so I would expect any leaks in the far distant future to not get to the ply but to go all the way through thus preventing damage.
Is there anything obviously wrong with doing this?
Thanks in advance for any opinions.
I have a new cunning plan and am wondering if anyone can point out obvious flaws,
A good example is one I will be repairing this week. The boom gallows is bolted through with 4 M6 bolts each end. At one end the ply is shot and investigation has shown the mastic has failed and rather than water going all the way through ( which would have been seen & resolved) , it has tracked into the ply and I have to replace a 6x8” piece.
The problem is that the wood, mastic and metal all have their own their own reactions to temperature and moisture.
I am not a nerd but do have a 3d printer. I have printed some 8mm sleeves (8mm I/d 6mm/od) in ABS, purchased epoxy which is compatible with plastic, and intend to fit the sleeves into the teak & sub deck. The bolts can then fit neatly through the sleeves, probably just with silicone. The plastic will have far less expansion than the metal, so I would expect any leaks in the far distant future to not get to the ply but to go all the way through thus preventing damage.
Is there anything obviously wrong with doing this?
Thanks in advance for any opinions.