Synthetic deck recommendations

We love Flexiteak. Had it fitted from new and after 5 years still looks good . I suggest if I tested though then have a look at some boats that have retrofitted.the only thing I would avoid is having fitted on yacht roof but I guess not relevant on a trader.
 
I’m currently removing my old teak myself and have had a quote from Sea Dek in Tollesbury, paid deposit and they’re making templates next week.

Home | Sea-Dek in United Kingdom

My rough maths would suggest at least 50% of the cost would be removal and surface prep, possibly more, so doing this myself.

This shows the full misery of it...!

2B789D09-861A-4599-B229-45AA0BC954A4.jpeg
 
Had this fitted on previous boat: Welcome on board | Marinedeck.net

Very good anti-slip.
No/minimal maintenance.
In Summer, keeps the heat out and in Winter it keeps the cold out.
After 10 years (when we sold the boat) it still looked as good as new.
I fully agree about cork decking and its plusses. I believe you sold your Kalik44 pretty quickly - did you get any negatives regarding the cork deck from punters when they viewed? I was always of the opinion that buyers were generally a pretty conservative bunch and might have been put off by a product which is not (IMO), by any means, mainstream.

I looked at SeaCork (a similar'ish French product) a couple of years back and was tempted to use it on a boat as a future teak deck replacement but could never find the resolve to commit in case it was a 'marmite' product in future purchaser's eyes.
 
Last edited:
I fully agree about cork decking and its plusses. I believe you sold your Kalik44 pretty quickly - did you get any negatives regarding the cork deck from punters when they viewed? I was always of the opinion that buyers were generally a pretty conservative bunch and might have been put off by a product which is not (IMO), by any means, mainstream.

Not really, the second one to view the boat bought here.
The first one to view also wanted to buy her (liked the deck) but wanted to wait for the sale of his previous boat to go through.
Waited too long.
 
I’m currently removing my old teak myself and have had a quote from Sea Dek in Tollesbury, paid deposit and they’re making templates next week.

Home | Sea-Dek in United Kingdom

My rough maths would suggest at least 50% of the cost would be removal and surface prep, possibly more, so doing this myself.

This shows the full misery of it...!

View attachment 104118
Wow, I'm of the opinion that I want to remove our old teak now and start filling holes. Where abouts are you? What did you find under your old teak?
Colin
 
Wow, I'm of the opinion that I want to remove our old teak now and start filling holes. Where abouts are you? What did you find under your old teak?
Colin

Hi Colin I'm at Medway Yacht Club in Lower Upnor, opposite Chatham Marina.

The old teak was screwed and sikaflexed down to the GRP and was worn down to the point trying to recaulk it would be a waste of time, the teak itself wasn't loose or coming unstuck, the plugs were starting to fall out and caulk failing.

I only got a few planks up in one piece, the vast majority of it was with a wooden mallet and chisel with a long handled scraper to get the caulk off. Screws were 50/50 on coming out with pliers or a driver. The resin/glue they fit the plugs with fills the head of the screw, I had some success banging a number 1, then number 2 head pozi in to clear it before unscrewing with impact driver.

The larger area in the middle I cut into smaller bits with a router to make chiseling easier. A Fein tool with a sraper and sanding attachment are helpful too.

I'll add some photos to show you what's left underneath, based on web searching I'd say it's come up quite cleanly. Baring in mind I've done carpentry based construction for 30 years and know my way around a power tool, my cockpit, comings and bathing platform took about 5 days to get off, spread over 10 half days between work etc.

I think another weeks work to fill, fair and polish the cockpit ready for install.
 
The last time our teak was caulked, there was no rebate to caulk into, so caulk was laid over the very thin (1mm) gap between planks. this is now crumbling away. 20% of the plugs are missing due to the teak not being thick enough to hold a plug :( it has to come up.
 
Wow, I'm of the opinion that I want to remove our old teak now and start filling holes. Where abouts are you? What did you find under your old teak?
Colin

That is THE question.
If it's teak screwed and glued on GRP, it's a big job but do-able.
It is what I was expecting.
Instead I found teak on marine ply (pulp/mush in places) on GRP.
It all went downhill fast from there.
 
Did you fit yourself and do you have any photos at all please? Really interested in cork.
Thanks, Colin
Re Cork deck.

You might find this PDF of interest. The product is SeaCork which 'ages' to a more neutral colour than Marinedeck2000. Both are excellent products.

Sea Cork install - thanks to Deb Cantrell NC36 Beedahbun.

DIY - ie doing all the prep yourself. It worked out at (that's just 47mm x 2m cork strip and one 0.5m x 2m sheet, adhesive, caulk and initial sealing coat) c€4700 inc VAT & delivery UK in 2018 for a Nauticat 36 - which works out at just over 19sq.m.

HTH
 
Top