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#1
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http://www.daviscoltd.com/nams/Docum...er_Report.html
By Thomas J. Rockett, Ph.D. and Vincent Rose, Ph.D. Department of Chemical Engineering; University of Rhode Island; Kingston, Rhode Island This report is the product of work accomplished under U. S. Coast Guard Grant #1501.83 |
#2
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Mic,
Thanks for all the information you are contributing to this group. I've found it informative and helpful. Don W. Mic wrote: http://www.daviscoltd.com/nams/Docum...er_Report.html By Thomas J. Rockett, Ph.D. and Vincent Rose, Ph.D. Department of Chemical Engineering; University of Rhode Island; Kingston, Rhode Island This report is the product of work accomplished under U. S. Coast Guard Grant #1501.83 |
#3
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On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 15:14:11 GMT, Don W
wrote: Mic, Thanks for all the information you are contributing to this group. I've found it informative and helpful. Don W. I appreciate your comments. There are so many that contribute to those of us interested in sailing. From their cruising logs and well thought out practical experience to restorations. The time and effort those people put into their contribution is so great it does make a difference. Mic wrote: http://www.daviscoltd.com/nams/Docum...er_Report.html By Thomas J. Rockett, Ph.D. and Vincent Rose, Ph.D. Department of Chemical Engineering; University of Rhode Island; Kingston, Rhode Island This report is the product of work accomplished under U. S. Coast Guard Grant #1501.83 |
#4
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Yes I want to say thanks for this as well.
Very interesting stuff Tony uk "Mic" wrote in message ... On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 15:14:11 GMT, Don W wrote: Mic, Thanks for all the information you are contributing to this group. I've found it informative and helpful. Don W. I appreciate your comments. There are so many that contribute to those of us interested in sailing. From their cruising logs and well thought out practical experience to restorations. The time and effort those people put into their contribution is so great it does make a difference. Mic wrote: http://www.daviscoltd.com/nams/Docum...er_Report.html By Thomas J. Rockett, Ph.D. and Vincent Rose, Ph.D. Department of Chemical Engineering; University of Rhode Island; Kingston, Rhode Island This report is the product of work accomplished under U. S. Coast Guard Grant #1501.83 |
#5
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On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 22:49:15 +0000 (UTC), "Tony"
wrote: Yes I want to say thanks for this as well. Very interesting stuff Thanks for the inspiration, I have found much of this info. interesting and useful. Enjoy.... Such appreciation has inspired me to provide further sailing info, thanks. Tony uk "Mic" wrote in message ... On Fri, 26 Aug 2005 15:14:11 GMT, Don W wrote: Mic, Thanks for all the information you are contributing to this group. I've found it informative and helpful. Don W. I appreciate your comments. There are so many that contribute to those of us interested in sailing. From their cruising logs and well thought out practical experience to restorations. The time and effort those people put into their contribution is so great it does make a difference. Mic wrote: http://www.daviscoltd.com/nams/Docum...er_Report.html By Thomas J. Rockett, Ph.D. and Vincent Rose, Ph.D. Department of Chemical Engineering; University of Rhode Island; Kingston, Rhode Island This report is the product of work accomplished under U. S. Coast Guard Grant #1501.83 |
#6
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Interesting material. However, I intend to re-start the debate over
the effects of blisters. Can anybody find any examples of hull failure due to normal blisters? I maintain that such blisters are at worst a cosmetic problem that are ussually hidden under water. I have seen a web site that says 80% of all blister repairs, even by gelcoat peeling are failures. |
#7
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Its fairly rare, but I have seen 1 case where the blistering was so bad as
to weaken the hull considerably and this boat was kept in freshwater Tony uk wrote in message ups.com... Interesting material. However, I intend to re-start the debate over the effects of blisters. Can anybody find any examples of hull failure due to normal blisters? I maintain that such blisters are at worst a cosmetic problem that are ussually hidden under water. I have seen a web site that says 80% of all blister repairs, even by gelcoat peeling are failures. |
#8
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#10
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I think that if you buy a boat, you directly ask the surveyor his
opinion on whether or not the blisters are a structural issue. I have owned two boats with blisters. The first I repaired by drying for 3 months and then grinding them out and filling with epoxy and then several epoxy barrier coats (I know, not the same as a gelcoat peel) and when it looked beautiful, it went back in the water and all my work was hidden. A total waste of time as none of the blisters was into the lam. The inside of the boat showed no problems at all. My current boat has some blisters and my strategy is to repair any that look bad and ignore the others. I had a surveyor look over the boat (not a real survey) for insurance purposes recently and he stated "No obvious blisters" even though I had seen them . I think that if a boat is over 20 yrs old and the blisters have not becom a structural prob, they arent likely to ever be. |
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