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dry rotted floor?
On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 10:32:08 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote: Even though well taken care of, I realize the boat is 25 yr old. but with the care I take of it plus the previous owners, can a floor just normally rot out when it's kept normally dry? I hate pulling the seats, peeling off the carpet and replacing the wood. The problem is the carpet. It retains moisture and creates a warm dark place next to the wood, just what rot likes best. My old runabout was a 1979 Winner 24 which was a pretty well built boat but it eventually developed floor rot in one area that was carpeted. |
dry rotted floor?
On Dec 4, 12:51*pm, Wayne.B wrote:
On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 10:32:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Even though well taken care of, I realize the boat is 25 yr old. but with the care I take of it plus the previous owners, can a floor just normally rot out when it's kept normally dry? I hate pulling the seats, peeling off the carpet and replacing the wood. The problem is the carpet. * It retains moisture and creates a warm dark place next to the wood, just what rot likes best. *My old runabout was a 1979 Winner 24 which was a pretty well built boat but it eventually developed floor rot *in one area that was carpeted. Oh wow, Wayne, I never thought of that, but I think you're probably right. Yeah, that carpet would keep the wood moist . Odd. the whole floor is carpeted and it's wierd that it would get spoungy right in that one spot. |
dry rotted floor?
On Dec 4, 1:55*pm, Tim wrote:
On Dec 4, 12:51*pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 10:32:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Even though well taken care of, I realize the boat is 25 yr old. but with the care I take of it plus the previous owners, can a floor just normally rot out when it's kept normally dry? I hate pulling the seats, peeling off the carpet and replacing the wood. The problem is the carpet. * It retains moisture and creates a warm dark place next to the wood, just what rot likes best. *My old runabout was a 1979 Winner 24 which was a pretty well built boat but it eventually developed floor rot *in one area that was carpeted. Oh wow, Wayne, I never thought of that, but I think you're probably right. Yeah, that carpet would keep the wood moist . Odd. the whole floor is carpeted and it's wierd that it would get spoungy right in that one spot. The floatation foam can also be a problem. A lot of runabouts were built with sealed (theoretically) bilge sections which are then filled with expanding foam. Problem is that water slowly wicks in via screws or impefections. The foam traps the water against the wood. |
dry rotted floor?
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dry rotted floor?
On Dec 4, 2:16*pm, NowWhat wrote:
In article 3802c3af-3d08-49a8-8296-4c3ea717afe9 @b15g2000yqd.googlegroups.com, says... On Dec 4, 12:51 pm, Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 10:32:08 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: Even though well taken care of, I realize the boat is 25 yr old. but with the care I take of it plus the previous owners, can a floor just normally rot out when it's kept normally dry? I hate pulling the seats, peeling off the carpet and replacing the wood. The problem is the carpet. It retains moisture and creates a warm dark place next to the wood, just what rot likes best. My old runabout was a 1979 Winner 24 which was a pretty well built boat but it eventually developed floor rot in one area that was carpeted. Oh wow, Wayne, I never thought of that, but I think you're probably right. Yeah, that carpet would keep the wood moist . Odd. the whole floor is carpeted and it's wierd that it would get spoungy right in that one spot. Probably when it's sitting there the bow is high and that's where the water in the carpet naturally flows to. -- WAFA the newsgroup liar free! You may also find stringer rot, as well. I simply gutted my Chris, and replaced the subframes, AND decking. The wood wasnt in bad shape for 40+ years old.With the water soaking in, it weighed a ton. The new Marine ply I used was feather-weight comparatively. |
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