HMS Chilcotin
Member
Floors are in!
I forgot to take pics along the way but will post some of the final result.
I masked around the foam with painters tape, then applied the adhesive right to the foam. With that in place I put the carpet down on the foam, adjusted and let dry.
Once dry, I pulled out the carpet with foam attached, and removed the tape from the boat floor.
I trimmed the edges of the carpet. Rather than wrap or tuck the carpet under the foam floor, I left enough so it rests against the edge of the boat. For my application I think this was the wiser choice.
To attach the floor, (so I can invert the boat on my truck rack) I poked a series of holes through the carpet and foam so I could wrap zip ties around the ribs in the floor. Then used Velcro around the edge of the carpet along the bench bases.
Overall I'm happy with the results as I achieved my goal (foam floors with little weight that can invert) but have to admit that the zip tie "stitching" isn't the prettiest solution.
Photos soon.
Ben
I forgot to take pics along the way but will post some of the final result.
I masked around the foam with painters tape, then applied the adhesive right to the foam. With that in place I put the carpet down on the foam, adjusted and let dry.
Once dry, I pulled out the carpet with foam attached, and removed the tape from the boat floor.
I trimmed the edges of the carpet. Rather than wrap or tuck the carpet under the foam floor, I left enough so it rests against the edge of the boat. For my application I think this was the wiser choice.
To attach the floor, (so I can invert the boat on my truck rack) I poked a series of holes through the carpet and foam so I could wrap zip ties around the ribs in the floor. Then used Velcro around the edge of the carpet along the bench bases.
Overall I'm happy with the results as I achieved my goal (foam floors with little weight that can invert) but have to admit that the zip tie "stitching" isn't the prettiest solution.
Photos soon.
Ben