olsnappa's Cape Fear

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hairymick
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Post by hairymick »

Come to Queensland mate. Everybody else is :D

Paddled here yesterday,

Image

Hervey Bay 8) 8)
Regards,
Mick

JEMWATERCRAFT Swampgirl; Wadefish;Touring Pirogue;South Wind; P5 ;
Laker X 2, Sasquatch 16.5 T-V 15 Okwata 15:
Cobia 15 (under construction)
olsnappa
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Location: Melbourne, Australia

Post by olsnappa »

hairymick wrote: Hervey Bay
Aarghh Mate.....Look at that!
Ya wouldn't be dead for quids, would ya...!! :lol:
John.
1 Cape Fear Sit In....a couple more planned
2 Laker 14's
1 Paddle board

"People who don't make mistakes don't make anything"
olsnappa
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Post by olsnappa »

This week I've been working on the rear deck and the hatch opening and cover.
I've decided to hinge the hatch cover and was thinking about the best ways of making it water tight......or as close too as possible.
I'll add lips around the opening and cover as suggested in the plans but I was also planning to top the lips with some 3mm thick rubber strips, figuring that will provide a better seal.
My question is, will the epoxy adequately bond the rubber to the ply... or is there another type of glue I should use?.... And in either case would I be better glueing the rubber to the raw wood or after glassing and coating it?
John.
1 Cape Fear Sit In....a couple more planned
2 Laker 14's
1 Paddle board

"People who don't make mistakes don't make anything"
jem
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Post by jem »

Epoxy with a little woodflour or other thickener should do it. I'd glue on top of cured epoxy.
-Matt. Designer.
olsnappa
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Post by olsnappa »

Ok. Thanks Matt.
John.
1 Cape Fear Sit In....a couple more planned
2 Laker 14's
1 Paddle board

"People who don't make mistakes don't make anything"
digr57
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Location: Tallahassee Florida

Post by digr57 »

A easy way is to buy some strip weatherproofing at the local hardware store The kind with the adhesive on it. Just pull off the paper and apply.

Russ
hairymick
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Post by hairymick »

John,

I would cover the wood with epoxy and then stick the gasket material with contact cement.
Regards,
Mick

JEMWATERCRAFT Swampgirl; Wadefish;Touring Pirogue;South Wind; P5 ;
Laker X 2, Sasquatch 16.5 T-V 15 Okwata 15:
Cobia 15 (under construction)
dangermouse01
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Location: Palm Bay, FL (east coast)

Post by dangermouse01 »

My first choice, would be the bought weather stripping with the adhesive backing Russ mentions. The brand name that I can think of is Frost King.
http://www.frostking.com/windoorweather.php
Dont get the light gray sponge rubber looking stuff (indoor use only). I think I use the closed cell PVC or maybe the high density stuff. Havent had any problem with their adhesive not sticking or coming loose over time.

Second choice would be contact cement like Mick says.

I think using epoxy is "to" permanent, if you ever had to remove it.

DM
olsnappa
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Post by olsnappa »

Ok...... thankyou all for your thoughts....
I'd thought about the self adhesive weather strip but had some doubts about how well it would stick......and stay put.
So having considered the options and since Digr57 and Dangermouse have found it to work and stay in place, I'll try that first. Not sure I can source Frost King here in Oz but will look for a similar quality rubber weatherstrip.......
I can always come back and try the glued rubber strip later if I have too.
Cheers
Last edited by olsnappa on Fri May 23, 2008 8:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
John.
1 Cape Fear Sit In....a couple more planned
2 Laker 14's
1 Paddle board

"People who don't make mistakes don't make anything"
jem
Site Admin
Posts: 4915
Joined: Fri Jun 18, 2004 8:14 pm
Type of boat I like: Wooden
Location: Greensboro, NC
Contact:

Post by jem »

that's true. You should just bond using whatever the gasket manufacturer says to ise. Epoxy would work, but gaskets will need to replaces at some time.
-Matt. Designer.
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