Troutman3000
Well-known member
You guys never cease to amaze me with the ingenuity I find in these posts.
DaveInGA said:BYOB,
Looks like you're making some good progress. I am restoring a 1986 Tracker V-17 and I see a lot of similarities in construction to yours. Mine doesn't drain well either and I think the original decks were designed to feed water back to a drain hole to the left of the console on mine. I plan to drill some bigger weep holes. Mine drains, but so slowly as to be almost useless.
One thing I didn't have problems with is the foam. It appears the flotation foam was improved by the mid-eighties and the foam in mine doesn't appear to hold/absorb water.
A couple of pieces of information that may be useful to you:
1. Your console cap is made of fiberglass. If it has problems and you can fiberglass, it won't be hard to fix. I don't have fiberglass skills, but I was able to fairly easily find a Tracker dealership that still had a "new old stock" replacement cap for $100.00. This was cheaper than I could hire anybody to repair my old console cap.
You may want to call around to the Marine outfits in your area. I found mine at Athens Marine. They haven't carried Tracker boats in years, but still had the cap in their store room. If you can't find one and want to buy a new one, pm me and I can give you their contact information. I'm sure they'll be glad to ship one and last I knew they still have one in their stock room.
Actually, It's all aluminum. I wasn't planning on keeping it, either. I really don't like the angle of the steering wheel, the placement of the gages, the flat windshield, the switches.....everything mostly. hahaha I've found one that originally went on a G3 on eBay classifieds that I'm going to go after. It's $250, but it comes with all the gages, updated switches, and a steering wheel.
2. A 50/50 mixture of Acetone and Xylol will dissolve all that nasty old carpet glue. Or you can buy GOOF OFF pre mixed. Big labor and time saver. Here's a brief rundown:
Spray it on generously and let the chemicals work for a minute or two to break down the glue. Once the crud is dissolved/softened, you can scrape most of it off, then use a piece of fairly coarse steel wool (best) or a green scrubbie pad (okay) to break it down, then rinse it off with a water hose. Check my build in my sig for greater detail and pics.
I will try this out for sure.
3. I haven't done it yet, but if your steering cable exterior is badly faded and dinged up like mine, you can order heat shrink in sizes big enough to recover the exterior. I'm going to "paint" the dings/cracks/etc. with liquid electric tape, let that dry, then slide the heat shrink over that.
The cable is out in the shed right now...I don't remember how bad it was, but I didn't really notice any big problems with it when it was on the boat. I'll keep this in mind, though.
4. BP blaster penetrating oil is your friend. That stuff is a live saver when removing stuck rusty bolts/nuts on the trailer. Allowed me to save all the stainless steel hardware on my trailer even though the self locking nuts were pretty much rusty crud.
Hope this helps.
TNtroller said:looks like you have a lot of work done from when you brought it home, and making progress is good. Keep up the hard work, and good luck.
BYOB Fishing said:Steelflex arrived today. It was pretty beat up, but nothing was leaking out so I guess it's OK. Looking forward to a long three-day weekend this weekend to put it on, If I can get the garage up to 75 degrees by then.
Enter your email address to join: