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#1
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A buddy handed me a tube of this stuff and gave me a little sermon on
its virtues compared to 5200. Apparently it is used in the auto industry and it sticks well to metal. Has anyone here been using it on boats and if so how's it holding up? -- Tom. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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I guess I do not understand your comment, as you did not include the basis
for the statement. I have used cases of the stuff and find 5200 extraordinarily useful. However, it is NOT a sealant. It is a very very tenacious, all temperature, gap filling, permanent adhesive with limited flexibility. Used correctly, it will last longer than the boat. It is expressly useful for adhering different materials having different expansion coefficients. Steve wrote in message ... On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 09:54:30 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: A buddy handed me a tube of this stuff and gave me a little sermon on its virtues compared to 5200. Apparently it is used in the auto industry and it sticks well to metal. Has anyone here been using it on boats and if so how's it holding up? -- Tom. "Silaprene" is the name for about 200 different formulas, some of which may react badly with what you are bonding, or have other issues. That said, 5200 is not a good general purpose adhesive, either. There are very few "good" uses for it on a boat. |
#3
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You are right but, owning a boat in which 5200 was used for everything by
the PO, I think all boat owners should be required to get a note from their mothers before being allowed to buy the stuff. -- Roger Long |
#4
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"Steve Lusardi" wrote in message
... I guess I do not understand your comment, as you did not include the basis for the statement. I have used cases of the stuff and find 5200 extraordinarily useful. However, it is NOT a sealant. It is a very very tenacious, all temperature, gap filling, permanent adhesive with limited flexibility. Used correctly, it will last longer than the boat. It is expressly useful for adhering different materials having different expansion coefficients. Steve wrote in message ... On Tue, 8 Jul 2008 09:54:30 -0700 (PDT), " wrote: A buddy handed me a tube of this stuff and gave me a little sermon on its virtues compared to 5200. Apparently it is used in the auto industry and it sticks well to metal. Has anyone here been using it on boats and if so how's it holding up? -- Tom. "Silaprene" is the name for about 200 different formulas, some of which may react badly with what you are bonding, or have other issues. That said, 5200 is not a good general purpose adhesive, either. There are very few "good" uses for it on a boat. It's not a good general purpose adhesive because it's permanent. I've used lots of it also, but only for things I don't want to ever unattach. 4200 is better for that sort of use. I don't believe he used the word sealant. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
#5
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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There is a solvent for 5200 which is also magic for getting 30 year old
striping tape residue and similar stuff off. I forgot the exact name but it is something like "Marine Formula". Google should turn it up. -- Roger Long |
#6
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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When I replaced the gaskets on my aluminum skylights, the company insisted
that only Silaprene would do the job. I couldn't find it anywhere and bought a tube from them for 20 bucks. So far (two seasons), no sign of the gaskets coming loose. It's used a lot to attach window glazing into high rise curtain walls if I remember the refererences during my search correctly. -- Roger Long |
#7
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#8
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On Jul 8, 8:54*am, " wrote:
*Has anyone here been using it on boats and if so how's it holding up? -- Tom. YES, A few years ago I needed to rebed my chain plates.They were the through the deck type. What caught my eye was a brief reference I read to an aritcle in some small boating magizine to Silaprene and its virtues. I researched Silaprene extensivily for a couple months talking to both their tech guys and Dow Corning, 3M, and a bunch of other tech guys. I posted my finding here. Just do a search and youll find all the Lap Strength.... Elongation..... etc specs. Bottom line is Silaprene is vastly superior to many adhesive typically used for chain plate to fiber glass bedding. Now comes the phiosophy arguments: 1) NEVER USE 5200 or others to seal becuase its so terrible to remove. Because it WILL fail. To that I say based on my application and product specs the reason why 5200 fails is because it is not designed for that application and is simply not tuff enough for the job. When you look up the numbers on the product youll find that Silaprene has a higher temp range than 5200. What the big deal with that? Temp on decks on a sunny day can EXCEED the temp range for 5200 and it DOES fail unlike Silaprene . SInce I have redesigned my trough deck chain plate and used Silaprene its been dry as a bone but mine is only about a 3 year study. However, if you actuyally do the reasearch and compare the SPECS of each of the more common sealants I bet you draw the sam conclussion as I. I may have plsted in RBbuilding and not RBC I cant remember. But its all there......... Bob PS have you noticed that several people posted here but none answered your question. They fixated on 5200 prob because that is all they know. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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This makes good sense with what I heard from the skylight people (Atkins
Hoyle) since metal skylight frames can get pretty damn hot. Do you know a source for Silaprene? I was unable to find it anywhere other than wholesale quantities except from Atkins Hoyle. -- Roger Long |
#10
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On Jul 8, 12:31*pm, "Roger Long" wrote:
When *I replaced the gaskets on my aluminum skylights, the company insisted that only Silaprene would do the job. *I couldn't find it anywhere and bought a tube from them for 20 bucks. *So far (two seasons), no sign of the gaskets coming loose. *It's used a lot to attach window glazing into high rise curtain walls if I remember the refererences during my search correctly. -- Roger Long Thanks for that. I googled Silaprene and the prices are all over the place but you can get it for about $9 a tube plus shipping. AFIK, it seems to mostly be an automotive product. So, my worry is that it might not really be up to long term immersion... Good to hear that it works on your skylights. -- Tom. |
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