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- May 26, 2024
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- LOCATION
- Farmville, NC
After 45 years, it was time to replace the floor in my 1979 Sea Nymph SS-170, and I figured if I was doing that, I'd strip it down to the hull and fix everything all at once. (Miraculously, the transom--which is just plywood with an aluminum skin on the outboard face--is in almost perfect condition...all credit to my Dad, the original owner, who kept it trailered and stored it well!)
Of course, all the foam was waterlogged and that all had to be torn out. After getting the whole thing stripped down to the hull, I found that the bottom of the hull--about 3" in front of the transom--is bent, almost creased, about 1" at the highest point. I suspect that it got bent because of the trailer; the back roller sits right at that spot. As a result, water collects right in front of this "hump" and the hull doesn't completely drain when the plug is pulled.
I'm wondering what, if anything, to do about it. I'd be tempted to hammer it out if I could, but there's a stout and firmly attached 2"x3" metal beam a couple inches above this spot, reinforcing the transom, and I can't really get in there with a mallet unless I remove that beam.
When I replace the floor system (including new pour foam), I'm planning to add new aluminum panels perpendicular to the existing braces (in other words, along the length of the boat) so that I can add the foam in "pockets" along both sides of the V-hull, leaving a channel of about 10" clear right down the center, so that the foam won't wind up waterlogged. So, perhaps a 1" pool of bilgewater in the center of the last couple feet of the hull won't really matter. Also, I trailer the boat, and when I get it home after each trip, I can fairly easily tilt it up to run out 95% of any bilgewater (and it'll be stored under a shed). So I don't think it'll have a lot of standing water, and maybe I'm worrying over nothing. But before continuing with the work, I figured I'd ask others who know more about it than I do.
What do y'all think: leave it or try to pound it out--and if the latter, can I pound it out without removing the metal transom reinforcement bar, or should I remove that and then just hit it with a hammer?
Brent
Of course, all the foam was waterlogged and that all had to be torn out. After getting the whole thing stripped down to the hull, I found that the bottom of the hull--about 3" in front of the transom--is bent, almost creased, about 1" at the highest point. I suspect that it got bent because of the trailer; the back roller sits right at that spot. As a result, water collects right in front of this "hump" and the hull doesn't completely drain when the plug is pulled.
I'm wondering what, if anything, to do about it. I'd be tempted to hammer it out if I could, but there's a stout and firmly attached 2"x3" metal beam a couple inches above this spot, reinforcing the transom, and I can't really get in there with a mallet unless I remove that beam.
When I replace the floor system (including new pour foam), I'm planning to add new aluminum panels perpendicular to the existing braces (in other words, along the length of the boat) so that I can add the foam in "pockets" along both sides of the V-hull, leaving a channel of about 10" clear right down the center, so that the foam won't wind up waterlogged. So, perhaps a 1" pool of bilgewater in the center of the last couple feet of the hull won't really matter. Also, I trailer the boat, and when I get it home after each trip, I can fairly easily tilt it up to run out 95% of any bilgewater (and it'll be stored under a shed). So I don't think it'll have a lot of standing water, and maybe I'm worrying over nothing. But before continuing with the work, I figured I'd ask others who know more about it than I do.
What do y'all think: leave it or try to pound it out--and if the latter, can I pound it out without removing the metal transom reinforcement bar, or should I remove that and then just hit it with a hammer?
Brent