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On Sep 15, 11:29 am, Jim wrote:
Mike wrote: I have an old Mastercraft inboard ski boat that I need some help with fixing. Where the shaft of the prop goes through the hull there is a metal plate. The edges around the plate were leaking and it was sealed with silicon. I cut out the gobs of silicon that were there and found that the plate sits in a 1/2 inch trough in the fiberglass hull. When the silicon was removed I can move the plate fairly easily by hand, even lifting it up slightly. I replaced the existing silicon with Goo marine sealant. I let the sealant set for 24 hours then lowered the boat back in the water. My little leak turned into a gusher. How is this plate supposed to be secured to the boat? Do I just need to do a better job with silicone? Is there some adjustment that needs to be made to hold the plate on better? Should this have done over with fiber glass? I put photos of the plate and problem area he www.lyonsland.com/BoatLeak Thanks for any help. --Mike Being no expert on that fitting, I'll make a guess. There may be fasteners through the hull from the bottom, or, it is bonded to the hull. Either way, the fix is the same. Remove the fitting, clean out all old "goo" and replace through hull fitting using new polysuphide (sp) sealant. You cannot EVER fix a leak by putting goo around the outside. Silicone is a bad choice for below the hull fittings. Polysulphide has a life span of 20 years. ± How many of our boats are that old? You may not nave to remove the shaft if you can slide the fitting aft enough to get good access to the surfaces and rotate the fitting enough to clean it properly. My opinion here is that anyone who uses the term "goo" does not understand the difference between the proper sealant for each job. Jim- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Jim, Thanks for the information. The reason I used the term Goo is that was the name brand of the product. That asisde, I don't know the proper sealent for the job, hence my post. Thanks, Mike |
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