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First, thanks to everyone who weighed in on floation foam. sounds like the
blue sheet foam is what I need. It will be glued to under gunnels and inside transom lockers, so expanding foam is ot an option. Brian, Sounds like you did a lot of work. Thanks for sharing the process and results. Blue foam it is, and a helluva lot less expensive then the stuff I was finding. Ed "Brian D" wrote in message ... Ed, I'm sure that your local foam supplier (see the yellow pages) can get the foam you need. I went to the one here, "The Foam Man" in Corvallis, Oregon, and bought several sample of different types of closed-cell foam to test them. I weighed each piece ahead of time (dry) and measured the dimensions (rectangular pieces). Then I tied each one to a brick and dropped it in a bucket of water where I left it for 8 months out in the shop, filling as necessary to make up for evaporation. With all the dust in the shop and mosquitoes trying to set up shop in the buckets, there was slime and who-knows-what growing in it ...short of using seawater and tossing in some oil and gas, I figured this was a pretty good emulation of a typical bilge where you might add flotation. After the 8 months, I took the blocks out, brushed them with a potato brush under running water to remove slime, padded 'barely dry' on the outside with paper towels just to get rid of sheet water on the foam, then weighed and measured each piece. I forget now all the types of foam that I tested, but the clear winner was closed-cell polyethylene (blue). They all absorb water over time, but the blue poly only gave up 3% of it's flotation capability (3% of the displaced water) and only swelled up about 3% in volume too. I followed this test by putting the blocks of foam in Ziploc bags for a couple of weeks, one end left open, to emulate a little trailer time for 'drying'. The blue poly was still wet and there was lots of condensation in the bag after a couple of weeks (not very good ventilation in/out of the bag), but the poly had given up half the absorbed water anyway. My conclusion was that the sealed-cell blue poly was an acceptable flotation foam. In my case, I was looking for something that could be cut to fit and installed, but could still be removed later on. Can't stand that expanding polyurethane foam ...everybody that I know that has used it in their boat has reported that it eventually becomes water logged and sloppy. It is best used in compartments that normally stay dry, not wet. Hope this info helps. For my boat project (see http://www.reelboats.com ), I'll have cut-to-fit sealed-cell blue polyethylene foam in the closed compartments, and will be able to remove the foam via large rectangular deck plates installed in the bottom of cabinets (not accessible to water on the deck ...deck plates leak). I'm going to run a nylon strap or rope through the first block that goes in so I can pull the blocks back out later on. It'll push the others towards the deck plate as I pull it out. Brian D "Ed Lindsey" wrote in message ... Hello, Does anyone know of an inexpensive sheet foam suitable for use as flotation? Possible sources in the western US? Thanks |
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