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Hello:
Any thoughts on this. Chainplates are a source of leaks and equal source of debate on how to fix the leak. Some people say use polysulfide because if you use 3M5200 you'll be tearing your boat apart to rebed plates in a few years. Others say the reasons why plates leak is because polysulfide do not have required strength. The only way to solve plate leaks is to use 3M5200. Why? It has a much stronger bond. Others say that 3M5200 loses its bond eventually and it too will leak. Only this time the boat owner has a major problem removing the old adhesive to rebed. Here is the question....... Why would 3M5200 bond fail? I called 3M tech people and they sent Tech Data Sheet (effective: 12/1/2004). Interesting data. I also called Royal Adhesive and received data for Silaprene. This is what I read. Stainless to Stainless Overlap Sheer Strength 3M5200.........352 psi Silaprene......488 psi Interesting. What about temperature. I was painting my garage last summer. Ambient temp was 94 degrees F. I hung a thermometer on the side of the garage in direct sun. Temp of garage wall was 150 degrees F. OUCH! How hot do chainplates and decks get in many parts of the world during the hot season? 130-150-180F? Just a guess. How does temperature effect plate adhesive bond? I got more TDS stuff. 3M data: (Service temperature -40F to 190F) "Heat resistance-Due to the decreased value in bond strength at elevated temperature, we do not recommend use of this product above 190F." Silaprene data: (Service temperature -60F to 250F) " Heat resistance-No significant loss of bond strength until 300 degrees F." Elevated Temperature Shear Strength 3M5200......................(70F 240psi)(150F 176psi)(190F 139psi)Teak test substrate. Silaprene.............(70F - 250F)No significant shear strength loss. Question. Could 5200 fail because deck and plate temperatures reduce its bond strength? Has anybody used Silaprene? Comparing data each company supplied says Silaprene has greater bond strength than 5200 on stainless steel and keeps its strength at temperatures when 5200 begins acting like butter (exaggeration). Ideas about the deck temperatures causing 5200 failure Should I use Silaprene to rebed my chainplates "forever?" Bob |
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chainplates | Boat Building |