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Jim Richardson wrote:
What about just using orings? should be easy enough to size, and placing them on the bolts, before laying the track down (the second time, doing the drilling one at a time sounds like a good idea to me) Neoprene orings should survive well, but maybe I am missing something? I've thought about that as well. It seems to me that using caulk to try to seal something that moves around even a little bit is a temporary solution at best. I've now got numerous small leaks in the deck of my boat which showed up only 2-3 years after being re-bedded by the PO. It would be nice to fix these in a way that didn't need to be redone every few years. I don't have a solution right now, other than to point to the sealer washers around the screws on my metal roof. A roof is exposed to terrific heat during the summer and it gets flexed slightly by the wind, and even hail yet maintains a watertight seal for decades. And Wayne: The fact that boats are usually not done that way _can_ be an indication that it isn't a good idea, but... Anyone have experience with using a sealer washer to seal around the bolts and screws that pierce the deck on their boat? Don W. |
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