Hi Chuck
Sounds like your nav station is like mine. Five years ago my floor raised 1.5 inches just in front of the nav station and along to the first quarter of the water tank. I cut the 1"x1" teak board that runs along the bilge pull up boards. These 1X1's are the only boards that are screwed down to the hull. Next. take out the teak boards that run along the water tank/nav area. I took out about five feet. The teak is glued to 1/2" plywood. If all goes well you can reuse the teak. This is where that German instrument called Fein(expensive as gold) comes in handy. Once the teak is removed cut the plywood so you have an inch protruding out to glue and screw a new piece of plywood in. You can now chisel on this rusty/expanded pop metal. Some will come out easy but the rest is hard as a rock. I could only chisel back four inches but gave three inches of clearance from hull to floor. I still have the
encapsulated pop outs under the water tank. Hopefully that will not be a problem.
Putting the floor back together just takes patience. Cut new 1/2 inch plywood strips 2" wide by the length you need. Slip 1" under the old plywood, glue and screw this together for a 1" lip to lay a new piece of 1/2 " plywood base for the teak. Hopefully you can use your old teak, if not just mill down a new piece to size. I only destroyed a long piece of the 1/4" Holly and milled a piece of Poplar that looks exactly like the original. Sand the old glue off your teak and glue it back together. I like Gorilla glue due to it's tenacity to stick in all conditions. Once it has curred water will not break the bond.
This worked well for five years. My return trip from Mexico via the Baja Bash was very wet with mucho saltwater finding it's way into the boat. Well the boat dried out and pop goes the floor boards in front of the water tank, under the nav station. A very small section about 18"X18". (This sounds like the problem area you have) The original cosmetic fix is still holding.
I started work on the new problem area last week and have removed the teak, plywood and metal. Took measurements and lots of pictures home and am ready to re-install the teak and new plywood. This fix will last due to total access and removal of all the metal.
Time spent on the first fix was four man days due to a lot of thinking about the unknown of what I would find and how to rebuild once metal removed. The new fix was very straight forward and will only take one man day to fix. I have not downloaded any pics yet but if you request I will send them out to your E mail address.
My decision not to take out the water tank and remove all the metal was due to $$$$. My tank is not leaking. Salt/rain water will find a way to enter those #$%^*encapsulated metal pop outs and expand. Removeing the water tank looks impossible unless you cut it up for access to the floor. (sawzall) Once the tank is removed you have total access to the floor leaving the teak surround in place. No cosmetics to worry about. Remove tank, floor and metal, replace floor, new tank and maybe a watermaker or storage area. That would be the best fix. Anyone know how to remove the watertank without total destruction?
Don Fife
S.V. Bugler P40 Hull 25 1982
From: katchep <kat...@pacbell.net> To: Passport Owners <Passpor...@googlegroups.com> Cc: crj...@pacbell.net Sent: Sat, April 24, 2010 10:48:24 AM Subject: [Passport] removing Passport 40 trim ballast under water tank |
Trial Run: The steel punchings that were installed under the water tank under the starboard bed and under the nav station, have been rusting. The floor under the nav station has been bowed up wards about an inch and the bunk sides are separated from the floor. . Does any one have a suggestion for removing this ballast without disassembling most of the bunk, and nav station? Thanks Chuck Johnson -- Passport Owners Association http://passportyachts.org To post to the group, use "reply all" or send email to Passpor...@googlegroups.com To reply to just the author, just use "reply: For more options, go to http://groups.google.com/group/PassportOwners?hl=en |
speaking of tools, late last season I stripped the stern toe rail using the orange stripper found at home depot and conventional Sandvik scrapers. two coats of stripper worked well and I think it was faster than a Fein which I have. For finishing, I used penetrating epoxy (2 coats) as a base and 5 coats of Bristol Finish- looked perfect.
The boat is back in the water and, sigh, the stern toe rail has orange peeled after lots of effort.
I think the problem is water is getting under the toe rail. Thus, ideally, the toe rail should be removed, dried and rebedded. Given the curvatures of the toe rail, I have been reluctant to do this in case the rail is damaged in the removal process. Has anyone tackled this?
Regards,
Bob
The Fein tool is worth every penny. It will last and the quality of the
accessories is great. If you are going to redo the caulking on the deck
there is no better tool. I use it for hard to reach spots when sanding, ie.
corners, edging, etc. A regular finishing sander with 80-100 grit aluminum
oxide was what I used for my decks.
Good luck,
George
s/v Wind Thief
Richmond, CA
-----Original Message-----
From: passpor...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:passpor...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of P. Sherwood
Sent: Thursday, May 06, 2010 9:51 AM
To: Passport Owners
Subject: [Passport] multi tools
Am looking ahead at tasks such as stripping and lightly sanding the
exterior teak, sanding and refinishing some of the woodwork in the
head, and polishing the interior port window frames. Does anyone have
any experience with or recommendations about multi-tools (Fein
Multimaster, Rockwell Sonicrafter, others)?
The Fein is breathtakingly expensive, and everyone gripes about how
much replacement blades, etc., cost. Do you really get what you pay
for? TIA for any advice. Cheers,
Phil
s/v Cynosure
Bahia de Caraquez
--
Passport Owners Association http://passportyachts.org
To post to the group, use "reply all" or send email to
Passpor...@googlegroups.com
To reply to just the author, just use "reply:
For more options, go to
http://groups.google.com/group/PassportOwners?hl=en
--
Passport Owners Association http://passportyachts.org
To post to the group, use "reply all" or send email to Passpor...@googlegroups.com
To reply to just the author, just use "reply:
For more options, go to
http://groups.google.com/group/PassportOwners?hl=en