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Toller June 13th 06 03:40 PM

boat repair?
 
A fiberglass canoe washed up on a friend's property a couple years ago. He
stuck it over on the side and forgot about it. I would like to fix it up
for my sons to use.

It has two holes in it that were very crudely patched with some sort of
caulk. It was also painted; much of which is flaking off.
I would like to put a layer of fiberglass over the holes, and then a layer
of fiberglass over the whole bottom to stiffen it and reinforce the hole
repairs.

That will require removing all the paint. The original fiberglass is pretty
thin, so I am reluctant to sand the paint off, but I am afraid that chemical
stripper will not be kind to the fiberglass.

Suggestions?

My older son doesn't have much to do this summer and is willing to do this
project, so labor is not an issue.



[email protected] June 13th 06 03:49 PM

boat repair?
 
Toller wrote:
A fiberglass canoe washed up on a friend's property a couple years ago. He
stuck it over on the side and forgot about it. I would like to fix it up
for my sons to use.

It has two holes in it that were very crudely patched with some sort of
caulk. It was also painted; much of which is flaking off.
I would like to put a layer of fiberglass over the holes, and then a layer
of fiberglass over the whole bottom to stiffen it and reinforce the hole
repairs.

That will require removing all the paint. The original fiberglass is pretty
thin, so I am reluctant to sand the paint off, but I am afraid that chemical
stripper will not be kind to the fiberglass.

Suggestions?

My older son doesn't have much to do this summer and is willing to do this
project, so labor is not an issue.


You will have better luck getting replies if you post it in
rec.boats.building newsgroup.

Jay Chan


HotRod June 13th 06 04:18 PM

boat repair?
 
I've done several boats that I stripped with a wire wheel on a grinder and
then layed up a couple layers of fiber glass. Make sure to recoat with
marine paint in order to get some good UV protection.



Joey June 14th 06 12:18 AM

boat repair?
 
Toller wrote:
A fiberglass canoe washed up on a friend's property a couple years ago. He
stuck it over on the side and forgot about it. I would like to fix it up
for my sons to use.

It has two holes in it that were very crudely patched with some sort of
caulk. It was also painted; much of which is flaking off.
I would like to put a layer of fiberglass over the holes, and then a layer
of fiberglass over the whole bottom to stiffen it and reinforce the hole
repairs.

That will require removing all the paint. The original fiberglass is pretty
thin, so I am reluctant to sand the paint off, but I am afraid that chemical
stripper will not be kind to the fiberglass.

Suggestions?

My older son doesn't have much to do this summer and is willing to do this
project, so labor is not an issue.



For fiberglass to stick correctly you will need to remove any layers
down to the original fiberglass so the new can overlap the old area by
at least 3-4 inches. Make sure you use a fiberglass mat cloth made for
marine use so it won't tear as strongness is the key. Several layers
are in order. The final layer can be sanded smooth to blend with the
original layer. If you don't care about the finish you can try to match
the paint using a non-water based paint. If you prefer the original
quality, then you will need to learn how to do gel coating. They sell
small kits on EBay for that. You can also get your marine fiberglass
there also. You can also tint fiberglass resin with color.

J

[email protected] June 14th 06 01:34 AM

boat repair?
 
Given all the work involved, the materials, skills needed for it to
come out right, the fact that sanding fiberglass isn't the most
pleasant or safest job without good breathing eqpt, etc, I'd think long
and hard before deciding to do this.

If it was just a couple of small repairs, it would be one thing, but to
patch and then resurface the whole bottom is a big project. I'd see
what used canoes go for first.


Toller June 14th 06 04:11 AM

boat repair?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
Given all the work involved, the materials, skills needed for it to
come out right, the fact that sanding fiberglass isn't the most
pleasant or safest job without good breathing eqpt, etc, I'd think long
and hard before deciding to do this.

If it was just a couple of small repairs, it would be one thing, but to
patch and then resurface the whole bottom is a big project. I'd see
what used canoes go for first.

Well; I have fiberglass, epoxy, and free labor. It be a good chance for my
son to actually learn to do something!




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