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Glenn Ashmore January 4th 06 07:47 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
Need recommendations for seams in the new teak side decks. The candidates
with estimated material cost a
Boat-Life pourable two part polysulfide $496
DetCo pourable two part polysulfide ???
Maritime Wood Products one part silicone $605
Teak Decking Systems SIS 440 ???
Teak Deck Company silicone $424

The silicones are prepacked in tubes or sausages which makes them a little
less messy.

--
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



DSK January 4th 06 08:58 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
We used SIS 440 and it's OK but messy. I have 5 unopened
tubes I can send you, if you pay the shipping.

But why in the heck are you putting a teak deck on? Heavy,
hot, slippery... a high price to pay to impress the
crab-crusher mafia....

Fresh Breezes- Doug King

Glenn Ashmore wrote:
Need recommendations for seams in the new teak side decks. The candidates
with estimated material cost a
Boat-Life pourable two part polysulfide $496
DetCo pourable two part polysulfide ???
Maritime Wood Products one part silicone $605
Teak Decking Systems SIS 440 ???
Teak Deck Company silicone $424

The silicones are prepacked in tubes or sausages which makes them a little
less messy.



Glenn Ashmore January 4th 06 10:44 PM

Teak seam caulk
 

"DSK" wrote in message
...
We used SIS 440 and it's OK but messy. I have 5 unopened tubes I can send
you, if you pay the shipping.

But why in the heck are you putting a teak deck on? Heavy, hot,
slippery... a high price to pay to impress the crab-crusher mafia....

Fresh Breezes- Doug King


Well, when you have lived with a girl for 6 years you feel kinda obligated
to get her dressed up in the best finery before hauling her out in public.
:-)

I have to admit it is mainly esthetics. The side decks are the only
exterior wood and are really needed to tie into the solid cherry interior.
Right now with the white cabin top and cockpit the boat just looks to
plastic until you get below.

--
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



Jim Conlin January 4th 06 10:45 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
There are some very good builders in these parts using the TDS SIS 440
product.
I've used it on a cockpit sole and liked it.
I used in the tubes and it applied cleanly. I didn't have the usual mess
where it ends up everywhere. Dunno why.
Sanding it off, you get easily handled crumbs. The finished surface of the
goo is acceptably smooth with few bubbles..


"Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message
news:VCVuf.1650$Dh.1089@dukeread04...
Need recommendations for seams in the new teak side decks. The candidates
with estimated material cost a
Boat-Life pourable two part polysulfide $496
DetCo pourable two part polysulfide ???
Maritime Wood Products one part silicone $605
Teak Decking Systems SIS 440 ???
Teak Deck Company silicone $424

The silicones are prepacked in tubes or sausages which makes them a little
less messy.

--
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





DSK January 5th 06 12:24 AM

Teak seam caulk
 
But why in the heck are you putting a teak deck on? Heavy, hot,
slippery... a high price to pay to impress the crab-crusher mafia....


Glenn Ashmore wrote:
Well, when you have lived with a girl for 6 years you feel kinda obligated
to get her dressed up in the best finery before hauling her out in public.
:-)


Sure. That's why we kept our teak deck for almost 3 years.
It is pretty.

I have to admit it is mainly esthetics. The side decks are the only
exterior wood and are really needed to tie into the solid cherry interior.
Right now with the white cabin top and cockpit the boat just looks to
plastic until you get below.


That makes sense too, but wouldn't something like a nice
buff colored accent be better than adding wood?

I have always been a heretic about teak decks, considering
it one of the slipperiest "non-skid" surfaces available for
boat decks. I have been on many wet, heeling, heaving teak
decks that felt like I was wearing roller skates... although
I admit that many molded-in nonskid patterns on prodction
boat decks wear quickly and are ineffective. If you want
*good* nonskid that really keeps your feet under you, look
to industrial standards... just remember to not add quite so
much when putting on surfaces people will also be sitting on....

And I'm serious about sending the SIS 440. We don't need it
any more.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King


chayco January 5th 06 12:58 AM

Teak seam caulk
 



"Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message
news:VCVuf.1650$Dh.1089@dukeread04...
Need recommendations for seams in the new teak side decks. The candidates
with estimated material cost a
Boat-Life pourable two part polysulfide $496
DetCo pourable two part polysulfide ???
Maritime Wood Products one part silicone $605
Teak Decking Systems SIS 440 ???
Teak Deck Company silicone $424

The silicones are prepacked in tubes or sausages which makes them a little
less messy.

--
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



I would use a polyurethane like Sikaflex 290 DC, it has high UV light
resistance, easy to sand and elastic enough to adhere and expand.
Teak decking systems product is also a polyurethane, I believe. An
established teak deck installer I know uses Teak Decking System product for
their decking projects.

My advice, reardless of the caulking product you choose, is to finish sand
your decks first and then caulk.

...Ken / island-teak.com





chayco January 5th 06 01:05 AM

Teak seam caulk
 

"Jim Conlin" wrote in message
...
There are some very good builders in these parts using the TDS SIS 440
product.
I've used it on a cockpit sole and liked it.
I used in the tubes and it applied cleanly. I didn't have the usual mess
where it ends up everywhere. Dunno why.
Sanding it off, you get easily handled crumbs. The finished surface of

the
goo is acceptably smooth with few bubbles..


It's them damned bubbles you want to avoid. Sand first, mask the caulking
groove well, apply your goo of choice, and trowel smooth.
BUT.....pull off the masking tape quickly (minutes). If you leave it seconds
too long you will end up with your goo of choice coming off with the masking
tape in fine stringers. Real hard to repair.

...Ken



chayco January 5th 06 01:11 AM

Teak seam caulk
 

"DSK" wrote in message
...
But why in the heck are you putting a teak deck on? Heavy, hot,
slippery... a high price to pay to impress the crab-crusher mafia....


Glenn Ashmore wrote:
Well, when you have lived with a girl for 6 years you feel kinda

obligated
to get her dressed up in the best finery before hauling her out in

public.
:-)


Sure. That's why we kept our teak deck for almost 3 years.
It is pretty.

I have to admit it is mainly esthetics. The side decks are the only
exterior wood and are really needed to tie into the solid cherry

interior.
Right now with the white cabin top and cockpit the boat just looks to
plastic until you get below.


That makes sense too, but wouldn't something like a nice
buff colored accent be better than adding wood?

I have always been a heretic about teak decks, considering
it one of the slipperiest "non-skid" surfaces available for
boat decks. I have been on many wet, heeling, heaving teak
decks that felt like I was wearing roller skates... although
I admit that many molded-in nonskid patterns on prodction
boat decks wear quickly and are ineffective. If you want
*good* nonskid that really keeps your feet under you, look
to industrial standards... just remember to not add quite so
much when putting on surfaces people will also be sitting on....

And I'm serious about sending the SIS 440. We don't need it
any more.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King



Ahh, I'm being pedantic......if you sand the teak deck first and then caulk
with your 'goo of choice' your caulking should set a masking tape thickness
'proud' of the deck, affording you with a wee bit more traction. Aye, and
that wee bit can make all the difference.

....Ken




DSK January 5th 06 01:46 AM

Teak seam caulk
 
chayco wrote:
Ahh, I'm being pedantic......


That should be OK, as long as it's between consenting
adults. ;)


.... if you sand the teak deck first and then caulk
with your 'goo of choice' your caulking should set a masking tape thickness
'proud' of the deck, affording you with a wee bit more traction. Aye, and
that wee bit can make all the difference.


Part of my heresy is that I've believed since early in my
experience of teak decks, that the seam compound was the
major (if not the only) part of the teak providing any grip
whatever.

Why not just put strips of rubber compound on a fiberglass
deck, and paint it brown... um wait a minute, is this an
orthodox crowd? I don't want to get burnt at the stake...

DSK


chayco January 5th 06 04:51 AM

Teak seam caulk
 

"DSK" wrote in message
...
chayco wrote:
Ahh, I'm being pedantic......


That should be OK, as long as it's between consenting
adults. ;)


.... if you sand the teak deck first and then caulk
with your 'goo of choice' your caulking should set a masking tape

thickness
'proud' of the deck, affording you with a wee bit more traction. Aye,

and
that wee bit can make all the difference.


Part of my heresy is that I've believed since early in my
experience of teak decks, that the seam compound was the
major (if not the only) part of the teak providing any grip
whatever.

Why not just put strips of rubber compound on a fiberglass
deck, and paint it brown... um wait a minute, is this an
orthodox crowd? I don't want to get burnt at the stake...

DSK


I got the matches. ;-)

Once you fellows have been on the polyester too long all sense of aesthetics
and appreciation for the natural sems to just slip away.
Ahh, it's okay........we know you'll eventually get bored with those smooth
legged fillies and be seen casting your eye lovingly over an old woody with
'lots of character'.

...Ken





Steve Lusardi January 5th 06 06:21 AM

Teak seam caulk
 
Ken,
Why do you sand first? I never do. I fill fat (that's push fill not pull.
Pull creates the bubbles and concave seams) with Sikaflex 290 and sand
flush. The mess is inevitable, but never an issue if you sand last. I end up
using more caulk, but a lot less labor, no bubbles and no concave seams. Who
said teak decks are cheap. You must tape the bottom of the seam, before you
caulk or you get peel separation under thermal expansion and contraction.
Also, you must clean and prime first. From a personal point of view,
Silicones have no place on a boat period. The stuff seems to go everywhere
and then nothing sticks to anything. You want grief, use silicone. Who said
teak decks are slippery when wet? Only a wet rug maybe better than raw
unfinished teak and a proper boat shoe.
Steve

"chayco" wrote in message
news:ya_uf.21557$tl.19048@pd7tw3no...



"Glenn Ashmore" wrote in message
news:VCVuf.1650$Dh.1089@dukeread04...
Need recommendations for seams in the new teak side decks. The
candidates
with estimated material cost a
Boat-Life pourable two part polysulfide $496
DetCo pourable two part polysulfide ???
Maritime Wood Products one part silicone $605
Teak Decking Systems SIS 440 ???
Teak Deck Company silicone $424

The silicones are prepacked in tubes or sausages which makes them a
little
less messy.

--
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



I would use a polyurethane like Sikaflex 290 DC, it has high UV light
resistance, easy to sand and elastic enough to adhere and expand.
Teak decking systems product is also a polyurethane, I believe. An
established teak deck installer I know uses Teak Decking System product
for
their decking projects.

My advice, reardless of the caulking product you choose, is to finish sand
your decks first and then caulk.

...Ken / island-teak.com







dadiOH January 5th 06 12:55 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
Steve Lusardi wrote:

Who said
teak decks are slippery when wet? .


Maybe because they keep them "pretty" instead of letting them weather to
a nice and rough grey?

--
dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



chayco January 5th 06 06:13 PM

Teak seam caulk
 

"Steve Lusardi" wrote in message
...
Ken,
Why do you sand first? I never do. I fill fat (that's push fill not pull.
Pull creates the bubbles and concave seams) with Sikaflex 290 and sand
flush. The mess is inevitable, but never an issue if you sand last. I end

up
using more caulk, but a lot less labor, no bubbles and no concave seams.

Who
said teak decks are cheap. You must tape the bottom of the seam, before

you
caulk or you get peel separation under thermal expansion and contraction.
Also, you must clean and prime first. From a personal point of view,
Silicones have no place on a boat period. The stuff seems to go everywhere
and then nothing sticks to anything. You want grief, use silicone. Who

said
teak decks are slippery when wet? Only a wet rug maybe better than raw
unfinished teak and a proper boat shoe.
Steve


Hi Steve,

I started out by caulking first and sanding it all later and inevitably some
air bubbles would show up. Really hard to repair and look seamless once they
are evident.
When I was doing the decks of a retro 50's Chriscraft Riveria, look alike, I
was using white Sikaflex and sanding all later....what a mess. The tiny air
bubbles were more pronounced in the white and the belt sander actually
imbeded teak fibers into the white Sikaflex. I reccomend the sanding first
approach now simply because there are no surprises later. You immediately
see the finished deck as you walk away from the job while it sets up.

Ahh, the tape on the bottom of the caulking groove question....I'm of two
minds on that. The elasticity of the caulk is compromised when attached to
three surfaces.
Okay, but I believe the thickness of the decking should be taken into
consideration and I do not know where that point is. On 3/16" decking I do
not use a 'break bond' tape (less wood movement). On 1/2" decking I do. On
3/8" decking....I'm not sure. What is your greatest consideration ?
Prevention of water getting to your subdeck of course. I think there is a
greater chance of occasional 'non adherance' of the caulking material to the
side of the caulking groove than from deck expansion problems on 3/8" minus.
I have found this especially when you run a wee shy on filling the groove
and have to add more later... and also when your 'close up glasses' have
sticky goo on them and you are maybe missing the small details. My primary
concern is that the subdeck is sealed effectively from upper deck water
leakage and in 3/8" minus I don't use a 'break bond' tape ....unless the
client requests it.

...Ken





Steve Lusardi January 5th 06 08:11 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
Ken,
Good answer. My experience is 3 decks, all 1/2" thick, but with 1/4" seam
depth and I cannot say you are wrong or right, but the break bond tape makes
sense to me. One deck I did that did not work well occurred because the teak
shrank too much. Once the teak deck was 2 years old and the deck was
recaulked, there were no more problems, so using teak of correct moisture
level has to be the greatest risk of new decks as it takes a very long time
to cure teak. I am inclined to think your bubble problem was linked to the
calk material you used as opposed to anything else. When doing a large deck,
labor savings is serious money and I think I will still sand last, but
thanks for your explanation anyway.
Steve

"chayco" wrote in message
news:aldvf.251660$ki.204315@pd7tw2no...

"Steve Lusardi" wrote in message
...
Ken,
Why do you sand first? I never do. I fill fat (that's push fill not pull.
Pull creates the bubbles and concave seams) with Sikaflex 290 and sand
flush. The mess is inevitable, but never an issue if you sand last. I end

up
using more caulk, but a lot less labor, no bubbles and no concave seams.

Who
said teak decks are cheap. You must tape the bottom of the seam, before

you
caulk or you get peel separation under thermal expansion and contraction.
Also, you must clean and prime first. From a personal point of view,
Silicones have no place on a boat period. The stuff seems to go
everywhere
and then nothing sticks to anything. You want grief, use silicone. Who

said
teak decks are slippery when wet? Only a wet rug maybe better than raw
unfinished teak and a proper boat shoe.
Steve


Hi Steve,

I started out by caulking first and sanding it all later and inevitably
some
air bubbles would show up. Really hard to repair and look seamless once
they
are evident.
When I was doing the decks of a retro 50's Chriscraft Riveria, look alike,
I
was using white Sikaflex and sanding all later....what a mess. The tiny
air
bubbles were more pronounced in the white and the belt sander actually
imbeded teak fibers into the white Sikaflex. I reccomend the sanding
first
approach now simply because there are no surprises later. You immediately
see the finished deck as you walk away from the job while it sets up.

Ahh, the tape on the bottom of the caulking groove question....I'm of two
minds on that. The elasticity of the caulk is compromised when attached to
three surfaces.
Okay, but I believe the thickness of the decking should be taken into
consideration and I do not know where that point is. On 3/16" decking I do
not use a 'break bond' tape (less wood movement). On 1/2" decking I do.
On
3/8" decking....I'm not sure. What is your greatest consideration ?
Prevention of water getting to your subdeck of course. I think there is a
greater chance of occasional 'non adherance' of the caulking material to
the
side of the caulking groove than from deck expansion problems on 3/8"
minus.
I have found this especially when you run a wee shy on filling the groove
and have to add more later... and also when your 'close up glasses' have
sticky goo on them and you are maybe missing the small details. My primary
concern is that the subdeck is sealed effectively from upper deck water
leakage and in 3/8" minus I don't use a 'break bond' tape ....unless the
client requests it.

...Ken







Wayne.B January 6th 06 04:56 AM

Teak seam caulk
 
On Thu, 05 Jan 2006 12:55:52 GMT, "dadiOH"
wrote:

Maybe because they keep them "pretty" instead of letting them weather to
a nice and rough grey?


=============================

Exactly. Gray is good, that's what I tell people uncharitable enough
to comment on mine. :-)

There is nothing slipperier than wet cetol. Don't even think of
getting it near a deck.


chayco January 6th 06 06:22 AM

Teak seam caulk
 

"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 05 Jan 2006 12:55:52 GMT, "dadiOH"
wrote:

Maybe because they keep them "pretty" instead of letting them weather to
a nice and rough grey?


=============================

Exactly. Gray is good, that's what I tell people uncharitable enough
to comment on mine. :-)

There is nothing slipperier than wet cetol. Don't even think of
getting it near a deck.


Decks are decks and you learn to appreciate the weathered look of teak,
especially if it keeps you upright and on board.The contrast between well
oiled teak in the proximity of weathered teak helps the deck rats realize
that your weathered teak deck is there out of design not sloth. What do you
use on non deck, but weather exposed teak ?

Cetol , in my opinion, does not bring out the natural luxurious appearance
of teak... but it does last longer than varnish.
Oils can be messy to apply and don't last on the surface very long. I have
been experimenting with a lanolin aerosol product that is easy to apply and
does last longer than 'teak oil' . It does fade in the sun but real quick
and easy to apply. It's called 'fluid film' and sold as a penetrating fluid
similar to WD40 but as it is primarily lanolin it doesn't evaporate like
WD40. After it soaks in, it isn't 'slippery'......but I would not want to
compromise my footing in a challenging moment when the winds are up. I do
use it on some runabout soles and dock trawlers.


....Ken






Keith January 6th 06 01:00 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
Agreed on the gray decks. I use Signature Finish's Honey Teak on my
non-deck exterior teak. A little hard to apply, but worth it in
appearance and longevity once on. All you have to do is put a coat or
two of clear on annually after roughing up the surface with a
Scotchbrite pad. See: http://www.fabulainc.com/


DSK January 6th 06 01:22 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
chayco wrote:
Decks are decks and you learn to appreciate the weathered look of teak,
especially if it keeps you upright and on board.


And when it doesn't, well, you stick tradition anyway ;)


Cetol , in my opinion, does not bring out the natural luxurious appearance
of teak...


Agreed, although the new stuff looks better than the 'orange
jello'.


.... but it does last longer than varnish.


I'm not so sure. I've owned a number of boats with
brightwork, including some that were all wood, and one
spectacular Swedish beauty with varnished topsides (that was
a long time ago). Tried a number of 'varnish substitutes'
but none were any significant time saving, especially in the
South where everything gets heavy UV.

Our current boat has *way* more brightwork than I wanted,
but my wife promised to take care of it... she learned
varnish work pretty well, and up thru last spring kept it in
beautiful shape. You could read a newspaper in the
reflection in the caprail.


Oils can be messy to apply and don't last on the surface very long. I have
been experimenting with a lanolin aerosol product that is easy to apply and
does last longer than 'teak oil' . It does fade in the sun but real quick
and easy to apply. It's called 'fluid film' and sold as a penetrating fluid
similar to WD40 but as it is primarily lanolin it doesn't evaporate like
WD40. After it soaks in, it isn't 'slippery'......but I would not want to
compromise my footing in a challenging moment when the winds are up. I do
use it on some runabout soles and dock trawlers.


Sounds interesting, where do you get it?

Fresh Breezes- Doug King


dadiOH January 6th 06 01:28 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
chayco wrote:
"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 05 Jan 2006 12:55:52 GMT, "dadiOH"
wrote:

Maybe because they keep them "pretty" instead of letting them
weather to a nice and rough grey?


=============================

Exactly. Gray is good, that's what I tell people uncharitable enough
to comment on mine. :-)

There is nothing slipperier than wet cetol. Don't even think of
getting it near a deck.


Decks are decks and you learn to appreciate the weathered look of
teak, especially if it keeps you upright and on board.The contrast
between well oiled teak in the proximity of weathered teak helps the
deck rats realize that your weathered teak deck is there out of
design not sloth. What do you use on non deck, but weather exposed
teak ?


It's been a long time since I've had *any* teak save the dashboard I
made a dozen years ago for my '73 Fiat Spyder.

When I had a sizeable sailboat I had considerable besides the deck but
it was "utility" teak...all the blocks (rope stropped) and their sheaves
were teak as were the belaying pin handles, pin rails and ratlines. I
made all and after doing so tossed them in a bucket of boiled linseed
oil for a day or two. Five years later they showed little weathering,
no grey; ten years later they were still in decent shape. Amazed the
hell out of me. Wasn't a pretty finish though...

--
dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



chayco January 7th 06 06:34 PM

Teak seam caulk
 

"DSK" wrote in message
. ..
chayco wrote:




Oils can be messy to apply and don't last on the surface very long. I

have
been experimenting with a lanolin aerosol product that is easy to apply

and
does last longer than 'teak oil' . It does fade in the sun but real

quick
and easy to apply. It's called 'fluid film' and sold as a penetrating

fluid
similar to WD40 but as it is primarily lanolin it doesn't evaporate like
WD40. After it soaks in, it isn't 'slippery'......but I would not want

to
compromise my footing in a challenging moment when the winds are up. I

do
use it on some runabout soles and dock trawlers.


Sounds interesting, where do you get it?

Fresh Breezes- Doug King



http://www.nlsproducts.ca/ff_e.html

...Ken



DSK January 13th 06 05:19 PM

Teak seam caulk
 
scudding along wrote:
btw, what is the crab-crusher mafia and how can I avoid them?
Thanks and smooth sailing.


You know, the guys who insist that any boat with a fin keel
is a death trap, and only the heaviest of heavy displacement
old-fashioned hull forms is fit to go to sea... some of
these guys have given up the gaff rig, but I suspect they'd
bring it back if they could.

You're welcome and Fresh Breezes to you-
Doug King



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