Shoedawg
Well-known member
Day 2 (May 4th 2014)
Goal: Remove the rotted deck and clean.
Got started around 10 this morning to start tearing out the deck. It took me and the wife about 8hrs to remove the deck, console, carpet, and drivers seat compartment. The deck was all rotted out and the screws were all rusted, stripped and nasty. Had to remove the panels on the side as well.
First we started with the drivers compartment. The steering console is to be removed as well along with those panels on the side.
There was carpet in the compartment that was in under the drivers bench seat. I had to completely remove it all to get access to the screws that hold the compartment unit down to the deck.
After removal of the bench compartment, the left and right side panels were next.
Both panels along the side of the boat were dead space. There was no foam between them. I am thinking I could do three things here:
1. Use the dead space for storage
2. Put foam boards between the dead space (and use some it for storage)
3. Remove the panels completely (not what I want to do, but an option)
Any suggestions or ideas???
Next was removing the rotted decking. I used a Stanley Wonder Bar (flat/thin pry bar) that is 21" long, a hammer, cats-claw and a body saw to remove the deck. I used the saw to make a thin cut line on the deck and snapped the deck with my hands, pulling up on it. Some of the wood just disintegrated in my hands. That body saw made it a lot easier to remove the deck.
I now needed to remove the console. This was a PITA!!! I had to remove the steering column, rip up carpet, and remove wiring, while documenting and taking pictures of everything I removed. It took some time to do, but I would have forgotten how it went back in place. I place the parts in zip-lock bags, label them and take a picture from where they got removed and need to return. It will save me time in the long run.
Underneath the console. The electrical wiring looks to be in good shape and the gauges work, but I am on the fence about replacing all the wiring with new marine grade type wiring.
The fuse box is definitively going to get replace.
This is the arm for the steering unit.
Here is the console removed. Now I can get rid of the rest of the deck.
The front deck was next in line to go.
Front deck is coming out, slow and steady.
Here is the front after removal and before clean up.
A lot of dirt was on the bottom of the boat. I am thinking I removed 5 lbs of it.
All that crappy wood is out!! Time to ShopVac the rest of the crap out of it and give it a good pressure wash.
All cleaned out and washed. This was of the biggest hurdle (so far, knock on wood) to get over and to move on to the re-mod/restore.
It was a long day and hot, but worth the effort and time. Next is the back of the boat. Need to remove some old top decking and get in the back storage areas, live well and battery compartments to clean those up. One step at a time.
Shoe
Goal: Remove the rotted deck and clean.
Got started around 10 this morning to start tearing out the deck. It took me and the wife about 8hrs to remove the deck, console, carpet, and drivers seat compartment. The deck was all rotted out and the screws were all rusted, stripped and nasty. Had to remove the panels on the side as well.
First we started with the drivers compartment. The steering console is to be removed as well along with those panels on the side.
There was carpet in the compartment that was in under the drivers bench seat. I had to completely remove it all to get access to the screws that hold the compartment unit down to the deck.
After removal of the bench compartment, the left and right side panels were next.
Both panels along the side of the boat were dead space. There was no foam between them. I am thinking I could do three things here:
1. Use the dead space for storage
2. Put foam boards between the dead space (and use some it for storage)
3. Remove the panels completely (not what I want to do, but an option)
Any suggestions or ideas???
Next was removing the rotted decking. I used a Stanley Wonder Bar (flat/thin pry bar) that is 21" long, a hammer, cats-claw and a body saw to remove the deck. I used the saw to make a thin cut line on the deck and snapped the deck with my hands, pulling up on it. Some of the wood just disintegrated in my hands. That body saw made it a lot easier to remove the deck.
I now needed to remove the console. This was a PITA!!! I had to remove the steering column, rip up carpet, and remove wiring, while documenting and taking pictures of everything I removed. It took some time to do, but I would have forgotten how it went back in place. I place the parts in zip-lock bags, label them and take a picture from where they got removed and need to return. It will save me time in the long run.
Underneath the console. The electrical wiring looks to be in good shape and the gauges work, but I am on the fence about replacing all the wiring with new marine grade type wiring.
The fuse box is definitively going to get replace.
This is the arm for the steering unit.
Here is the console removed. Now I can get rid of the rest of the deck.
The front deck was next in line to go.
Front deck is coming out, slow and steady.
Here is the front after removal and before clean up.
A lot of dirt was on the bottom of the boat. I am thinking I removed 5 lbs of it.
All that crappy wood is out!! Time to ShopVac the rest of the crap out of it and give it a good pressure wash.
All cleaned out and washed. This was of the biggest hurdle (so far, knock on wood) to get over and to move on to the re-mod/restore.
It was a long day and hot, but worth the effort and time. Next is the back of the boat. Need to remove some old top decking and get in the back storage areas, live well and battery compartments to clean those up. One step at a time.
Shoe