PVC teak replacement

harvey38

Well-known member
Joined
27 May 2008
Messages
1,659
Visit site
We're very happy with Tek-Dek, five or six different shades of 'Teak' available, great underfoot and a realistic surface, very non-slip.

The photos don't really do it justice as they lost a great deal of resolution being re-sized to post.
 

Attachments

  • 20220927_160051_resize_89.jpg
    20220927_160051_resize_89.jpg
    92.6 KB · Views: 28
  • 20220927_160144_resize_10.jpg
    20220927_160144_resize_10.jpg
    374.1 KB · Views: 28
Last edited:

Tradewinds

Well-known member
Joined
12 Jan 2003
Messages
4,025
Location
Suffolk
www.laurelberrystudio.com
Talk to Olly Rofix - www.rofixrestoration.com

Bear in mind that preparation is key. If your deck has lumps and bumps your newly fitted deck will look like railway tracks that have buckled in the heat. You can spot boats with this problem a mile off. Walk round a marina with a critical eye. I've only seen one boat that, to my eyes, looked the business and he paid a lot of money for the job much of which went on fairing the substrate.
 

davidej

Well-known member
Joined
17 Nov 2004
Messages
6,563
Location
West Mersea. north Essex
Visit site
We invited several suppliers/ installers to visit our boat and give us an estimate. Some never replied and those that did visit didn’t come up with a quotation.

Waste of everybody’s time. We got Ross at Mersea Marine to repair the existing teak and, as ever , he did a great job.
 

Rafiki

Well-known member
Joined
20 Jul 2009
Messages
1,047
Location
North Bucks
Visit site
Thanks, Tek-Dek have confirmed they can quote. Someone in our marina also suggested them as well as a couple of suggestions for flexiteek.
I used Tek Dek to replace the worn out stuff on my cockpit seats. As others have said preparation is vital. Also "margined" panels look so much better and not that much more expensive.
 

ex-Gladys

Well-known member
Joined
29 Aug 2003
Messages
5,191
Location
Colchester, Essex
Visit site
Vacuum bagging is more to do with moulding new stuff. Basically, it involves "what it says on the tin". The material (carbon fibre mat, kevlar, glass mat etc) are placed into the bag and once the lay up is complete, the bag is sealed and the vacuum induced. This makes sure that the resin is properly sucked into the laminate... Quite a specialist job, and a bit difficult to do as part of a repair, as far as I am aware...
 

Keith 66

Well-known member
Joined
21 Jun 2007
Messages
1,685
Location
Benfleet Essex
Visit site
Vacumn bagging can be done on a flat surface such as a deck using sealing tape or strip, (Its like a roll ofsticky blu tac), vac bags can be made of silicone rubber, nylon or other stuff, at a pinch polythene sheet can be used.
Put a vac connector in the middle & suck the air out. It gets quite involved the bigger it gets & can be very expensive on consumables. But if you want a perfect even clamping pressure it cant be beat.
 
Top