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Doug,
![]() them on and painting around them, or doing something like duct taping heavy plastic over the holes while the hatches are removed. Of course, you could just leave everything else off, but re-install the hatches between work sessions. If you used a temporary rubber gasket (such as the stick on stuff they sell at home depot) to bed the hatches temporarily, they should be mostly watertight, and you'd just pull up the temporary gaskets while working on the deck. Since the material comes in rolls you could just throw out the used material and make new ones every time you replaced the hatches. Or a better idea is to put the sticky side of the material to the hatches, so that you could just pull them up. (Thinking on my feet here). Not a solution for green water over the deck, but it should keep the rain out while you're working on her. In either case (duct tape and plastic, or replacing the hatches) you'll have to make sure that the primer / paint / whatever is good and dry before covering the hatches or you'll be pulling it off the next time you remove the hatches. Of course, that stuff dries pretty fast in the sun. Good luck with it, Don W. Doug Dotson wrote: I'm not too worried about the little stuff. It's the 24" square holes left by the hatches that become a problem. Doug s/v Callista |
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