Has anyone tried DeBond Marine Formula? I have been using it on 6 to 8
month old 5200 and it works great. Had to remove a couple of fittings that
I had installed a little to soon and had to take them off to get under them
to work. Came off the fiberglass clean with a little prying with a
screwdriver and a plastic wedge with no mess and no damage to the FRP.
Just scored around he edges with a razor knife, sprayed on the DeBond and
waited about 5 minutes. Lifted one corner with the screw driver, inserted
the wedge and lifted the other corner. I don't know how it did it but it
penetrated across both surfaces of a 3" wide area of 5200. Might take 2 or
3 applications to make it across a wider area.
Also good for cleaning up those drips that seem to leap across the boat.
--
Glenn Ashmore
I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack
there of) at:
http://www.rutuonline.com
Shameless Commercial Division:
http://www.spade-anchor-us.com
wrote in message
...
On Jul 13, 1:15 pm, wrote:
On Sun, 13 Jul 2008 08:51:12 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
Guys like
you should not use it... Damaging deck hardware & fittings? WTF??!?
wrote:
No, that's not what I said.
Yes it is.
Maybe this will refresh your memory
wrote:
What it is NOT, is a GENERAL PURPOSE adhesive OR sealant. It should
never be used for deck hardware or fittings, as it can not be easily
removed without damaging the items it is bonding and sealing. "
See? You wrote fairly plain English. Or were the grandkids playing
with the computer again?
... When you bed deck hardware and fittings to a fiberglass deck or
hull surface, removing that piece without damage to the fiberglas is
not always
a complete success.
It is if you know how.
Bull, unless you are in the habit of applying a layer of wax on the
fiberglass
so The 5200 never actually bonds to it.
Actually, I keep a layer of wax on most of my boat's surfaces. But not
in places where fittings are mounted & bedded. Is that what you do?
My method in removing 5200 has been to use a thin blade to cut it
free, then use a small wire wheel to remove it from both surfaces.
It's time consuming, but I've only had to do this a few times. Only
once do I recall a 5200-bedded fitting leaking and requiring re-
bedding. A pretty good record IMHO.
Still, there are a lot of places that 5200 isn't really good to use.
You should try to calm down and think before you post, Saltie/BB
Yes, I should ignore trolls such as you who post only to start trouble. I
hope
you can always handle what you get in return.
Are you threatening me, BB?
Waddaya gonna do, get out your phone book again?
DSK