Thx. Gonna take your advice and work on the transom this weekend.You could thin it with mineral spirits a little or you could warm the wood by placing it in the sun which will open up the pours some. I put 3 coats of Marine Spar varnish (satin) with a light steel wooling between coats and it has lasted a long time. Now if you use plywood I would say then the fiberglass application is probably a good idea. I live in Florida also so i know all about Hurricane damaged boats..........we got plenty of em down here too on the southwest coast.
Yes, I just can’t find any of the exterior grades that are not treated. Unless I’m getting this wrong. At HD and lowes I see “treated” 3/4 BCX plywood. The word treated, is what specifically threw me off since I know not to use “pressure treated”. Are they treated with different chemicals?
The pressure treatment introduces Copper sulfide among other things to the wood. If it is against the aluminum it will react and eat the aluminum.Great thread. We are also getting ready to replace a transom on a ‘61 Lone Star Big Fisherman my son bought on the side of the road this month. What is the reasoning for not using pressure treated wood? I’m not sure that’s what the kid is doing but I’d better make sure & tell him why.
I have used Seacast often and it is an excellent product.
You would probably be best to make a form and pour and level it, then install it into your boat after setting, rather than trying to pour it directly into the transom. Pouring directly would create a huge amount of work, trust me on that one.
Probably a 5 gallon kit, I would think.I've heard and out of curiousity looked at that product. I like the product. Like most superior products it carries a superior price. I assume it would take 2+ gallons of the stuff to do a typical tin boat transom?
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