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For winches I would use butyl every time. For showers I would possibly use silicon.i’ll ask again then, what would you use to seal around the shower and to bed winches that need to be removed for maintenance?
For winches I would use butyl every time. For showers I would possibly use silicon.i’ll ask again then, what would you use to seal around the shower and to bed winches that need to be removed for maintenance?
It doesn’t get fully squeezed out, just any excess. Never had a leak using it.You’re going to seal a shower cubicle with Butyl tape?! I certainly wouldn’t use a non setting butyl for bedding winches it’d be squeezed out in no time and leak.
Many, many people report leaks and having to retighten bolts as it gradually seeps. It’s the reason none of the boat manufacturers still use it as it doesn’t last as well as modern alternatives.It doesn’t get fully squeezed out, just any excess. Never had a leak using it.
Seems to me it gets used and recommended by many people on this forum. I’ve never used it, but should I need a non adhesive sealant I’d be happy enough to use it. I’d also happily use silicon in a boat shower, just nowhere near anywhere that was likely to need painting or adhesives applied, by which I guess I mean the exterior of boat (see Vyv’s post #15)Many, many people report leaks and having to retighten bolts as it gradually seeps…
As do CQR anchors. Technology and best practice move forwards but sailors often don’t.Seems to me it gets used and recommended by many people on this forum
Indeed and using silicone was never good practice on a boat. There is nothing on a boat that needs sealing that cannot be done with better products than silicone.As do CQR anchors. Technology and best practice move forwards but sailors often don’t.
I must have missed the posts on here which spark the similar disdain for butyl sealants (except your's). It sounds like you have never tried it.As do CQR anchors. Technology and best practice move forwards but sailors often don’t.
Interesting.I use Saba Sealtack on all my skins. Even goes off under water and you can release it again if you want with heat. Also paintable.
SABA tack 750XL Adhesive Sealant
Sabatack 750XL Awarded PBO “Best For Metal” Award - June 2013 - Sabatack 750XL is a 1-component MS polymer-based 'universal adhesive sealant' for bonding and sealing both above & below the waterline.
Shower cubicle? Bedding winches? If you’re going to say better products are available name them. Nothing at all wrong with silicone on a boat in the right place.Indeed and using silicone was never good practice on a boat. There is nothing on a boat that needs sealing that cannot be done with better products than silicone.
It’s just a thick goop. Put it under something that tightens down and you have the choice to either tighten down until it’s gone or tighten until it seals. If the latter, you’ll have to regularly re-tighten and trim the excess. It’s just the nature of the product. It was great in its time but that time passed long ago. No boat manufacturers use it these days, it’s too fiddly, too messy and too ineffective. Clearly it still has a following among older sailors, and some young sailors try it as a result but most will regret it and replace later on.I must have missed the posts on here which spark the similar disdain for butyl sealants (except your's). It sounds like you have never tried it.
It is not for every application on a boat, but I have found butyl have considerable more longevity than 'modern sealants' - actually I don't think I have ever had one fail over time, unlike modern sealants. Your descriptions of failure by it all 'oozing out' are unfamiliar.
A not unexpected, dismissive reply. Plenty of people on these fora have tried it, and found it more successful in their situations, including me. Age is irrelevant, but not experience. Try it - you might be surprised and who knows, you might even change your mind.It’s just a thick goop. Put it under something that tightens down and you have the choice to either tighten down until it’s gone or tighten until it seals. If the latter, you’ll have to regularly re-tighten and trim the excess. It’s just the nature of the product. It was great in its time but that time passed long ago. No boat manufacturers use it these days, it’s too fiddly, too messy and too ineffective. Clearly it still has a following among older sailors, and some young sailors try it as a result but most will regret it and replace later on.
Like others, just putting an 'alternative viewpoint' to your statements on butyl sealants, based on first hand, direct use.I wasn’t really arguing against it in this thread though, just countering the idiotic statement that silicone has no place on a boat where clearly it doe
Indeed, but nevertheless they do use sensible stuff. My jeanneau had skin fittings fitted with Sika 291i and were easily removed. Winches bedded in clear silicone, easily removed and easy to clean up for re-fitting. Carpets stuck down with clear silicone, grippy and easy to replace.I’d suggest that boat manufacturers never (well hardly ever) have to remove items that they’ve stuck down. As an owner, and boat restorer, that is an issue. It’s also good practice to check, and tighten if necessary, critical bolts/screws.
CT1, OB1, PU40, Sikaflex..... all good for showers, winches and anywhere else you need a sealant. CT1/OB1 are cheap enough, can be used on wet surfaces, will cure underwater, do not stop other sealants from curing, do not make surfaces where used unpaintable. Compared to silicon there are no downsides, only advantages. Silicon is a bodge.Shower cubicle? Bedding winches? If you’re going to say better products are available name them. Nothing at all wrong with silicone on a boat in the right place.
You’ve never had to tighten down or trim butyl tape then? Interesting given the number of people who do have to, and the instructions indicating it’s needed. People have experience both ways, for some reason you assume I don’t have experience simply because that wouldn’t fit your narrative.A not unexpected, dismissive reply. Plenty of people on these fora have tried it, and found it more successful in their situations, including me. Age is irrelevant, but not experience. Try it - you might be surprised and who knows, you might even change your mind.
Like others, just putting an 'alternative viewpoint' to your statements on butyl sealants, based on first hand, direct use.
Adhesive sealants are not good for either use-case I mentioned. They’re extremely difficult to remove (by design) and hard to clean up as a result.CT1, OB1, PU40, Sikaflex..... all good for showers, winches and anywhere else you need a sealant. CT1/OB1 are cheap enough, can be used on wet surfaces, will cure underwater, do not stop other sealants from curing, do not make surfaces where used unpaintable. Compared to silicon there are no downsides, only advantages. Silicon is a bodge.
Returned true to form i see. Can you not take part in a thread without calling people who disagree with you idiots ?I wasn’t really arguing against it in this thread though, just countering the idiotic statement that silicone has no place on a boat where clearly it does.
I didn't, I said it was an idiotic statement, which it is as there are obviously uses for silicone sealant on boats and it is widely used on boats from all manufacturers.Returned true to form i see. Can you not take part in a thread without calling people who disagree with you idiots ?