byron
i thought you just painted it. i haven't built the one i have, but it doesn't
seem to have anything else. i think they use green treat near the bottom. i
think the bottom skin should be epoxied on both sides, as well as the very
outside. no glass, just epoxy.
Thompson's Water seal doesn't sound the best. Especially if there are any
surfaces that need to be glued. I can tell you how my brother just finished
up his stitch and glue sea kayak. Epoxy inside and out as per the
directions. That's even in the water-tight hatches. Don't goop it on
though. Make sure your epoxy is warm and spread it out as thin as possible
with a squeegee. We warm the epoxy by placing the containers in buckets of
hot tap water.
This is probably the best waterproof method, but also the heaviest and most
expensive. Paint would be my second choice. If you glue the deck on, it
would be best to glue bare wood to bare wood. The worst thing would be to
paint everything and then rely on the epoxy to adhere to the paint.
byron <sni...@lycosmail.com> wrote in message
news:3A8899F5...@lycosmail.com...
Have I missed something here?
Dave Bosworth
dave and co. <da...@premier1.net> wrote in message
news:t8ir9ri...@corp.supernews.com...
byron
"NWCedarDecks" <nwceda...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:20010214012439...@ng-cl1.aol.com...
As far as cost goes, I think that is minimal compared to all the time and
money your going to invest in your hovercraft. Would you rather save a dime
and have to rebuild your hovercraft in a few years? I think it's money
well spent doing the best job you can to preserve your craft.
I bet this topic has been discussed at length in the boat builders news
group. You could try doing a search in deja.com (which is now owned by
Google by the way). You could also post the question to the builders group.
If I were building a wood hull I'd go research this myself. However, my
hovercraft will be foam so my interest is only academic at this point.
byron wrote in message <3A89EA37...@lycosmail.com>...
Reading through this post this morn I remembered that I had neglected to
mention a step in the process, primer. this to adds time and money.
If your anything like me I've slopped enough epoxy around during the glueing
and generally mix more than needed for the job(better to much than not
enough)and this makes up most of the fisrt coat.
I am building the 12t4, had to buy a gallon kit, I don't think I'm in any
danger of running out.
The 17t in the UH const. vid shows the inside paint flaking off, I would
hate to redue that, (but think of the years of fun in the sun they had with
that craft) and they move on.
Dave Bosworth
Good luck
Jim
byron
Good luck.
Jim
byron wrote in message <3A8C337E...@lycosmail.com>...