muskyhunter1978
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2023
- Messages
- 57
- Reaction score
- 88
- LOCATION
- Bellefonte, PA
Hello everyone. First time poster here.
I have some questions I'm hoping the experts on here would be able to point me in the right direction or affirm that I"m headed that way. I got a killer deal over the summer on a 99 Starcraft Superfisherman 176. The boat hull is perfect, hardly a mark or ding on it. Carpet, seats, everything is in very good shape for its year. The issue that I found on this boat is the transom. There are about a dozen spots where its corroded completely through. The previous owners had a boat shop patch them with some epoxy type of stuff, which is holding fine. The boat takes on no water. All of the spots are where the wood inside is in contact with the aluminum. I spoke with a boat restoration place and sent them pictures. They indicated this wasn't uncommon for that boat and year and said it was from the wood being treated reacting with the aluminum. They wanted 3K to repair it, but I'm handy and have restored a few other boats in the past. First transom however.
Here is my plan. I have already begun the disassembly of the rear of the boat. Motor is off, back deck removed and the top cap is off. I am going to remove the splash well, and other aluminum that encloses the transom wood. I will then pull the wood core out, using it as a stencil to make a new core from non treated plywood, then put a couple of coats of epoxy to seal it. My plan is to fit it, drill all of my holes, then pull it back out and redrill the holes a bit larger so I can full encapsulate each through hole with resin as well.
As for the aluminum. Once I have access to the backside of the transom aluminum, and provided it don't look too terribly bad, I will clean up the pitting with an angle grinder, wire brush, etc to remove as much of the corrosion and oxidation as possible. Then I will give it all a good cleaning with an acid etch to further ensure the corrosion is gone. After this, my thoughts are to chemically bond a 1/16" thick sheet of aluminum to the backside of the transom skin. I watched a video of a gentleman that did this process and he seems like he does very good work. He used a product called GFlex epoxy which sounds like it has very similar properties to the glues they use to attach body panels to cars. Tough stuff. This will strengthen the tin and most importantly completely seal any of the corrosion holes that are all the way through. After this, I will use the epoxy on the outside to seal up the holes from the outside as well. My understanding of corrosion is that once you remove oxygen from the equation, it can't do what corrosion does. Then, sand, prime and paint the outside. I should be then ready to reassemble the boat.
Its a great boat and really like fishing off of it so far. I'd like to rebuild the transom for now, then upgrade/work on other parts as I go. Seems like the boat has a lot of life left in it.
Thoughts on my plan?
I have some questions I'm hoping the experts on here would be able to point me in the right direction or affirm that I"m headed that way. I got a killer deal over the summer on a 99 Starcraft Superfisherman 176. The boat hull is perfect, hardly a mark or ding on it. Carpet, seats, everything is in very good shape for its year. The issue that I found on this boat is the transom. There are about a dozen spots where its corroded completely through. The previous owners had a boat shop patch them with some epoxy type of stuff, which is holding fine. The boat takes on no water. All of the spots are where the wood inside is in contact with the aluminum. I spoke with a boat restoration place and sent them pictures. They indicated this wasn't uncommon for that boat and year and said it was from the wood being treated reacting with the aluminum. They wanted 3K to repair it, but I'm handy and have restored a few other boats in the past. First transom however.
Here is my plan. I have already begun the disassembly of the rear of the boat. Motor is off, back deck removed and the top cap is off. I am going to remove the splash well, and other aluminum that encloses the transom wood. I will then pull the wood core out, using it as a stencil to make a new core from non treated plywood, then put a couple of coats of epoxy to seal it. My plan is to fit it, drill all of my holes, then pull it back out and redrill the holes a bit larger so I can full encapsulate each through hole with resin as well.
As for the aluminum. Once I have access to the backside of the transom aluminum, and provided it don't look too terribly bad, I will clean up the pitting with an angle grinder, wire brush, etc to remove as much of the corrosion and oxidation as possible. Then I will give it all a good cleaning with an acid etch to further ensure the corrosion is gone. After this, my thoughts are to chemically bond a 1/16" thick sheet of aluminum to the backside of the transom skin. I watched a video of a gentleman that did this process and he seems like he does very good work. He used a product called GFlex epoxy which sounds like it has very similar properties to the glues they use to attach body panels to cars. Tough stuff. This will strengthen the tin and most importantly completely seal any of the corrosion holes that are all the way through. After this, I will use the epoxy on the outside to seal up the holes from the outside as well. My understanding of corrosion is that once you remove oxygen from the equation, it can't do what corrosion does. Then, sand, prime and paint the outside. I should be then ready to reassemble the boat.
Its a great boat and really like fishing off of it so far. I'd like to rebuild the transom for now, then upgrade/work on other parts as I go. Seems like the boat has a lot of life left in it.
Thoughts on my plan?