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Keyser Soze June 11th 18 05:37 PM

It’s real.....
 
On 6/11/18 12:32 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 20:54:53 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


10:11
On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 17:43:19 -0400, Keyser Söze
wrote:
- show quoted text -
30 is a young pup. mine is 44. It gets a new motor every 3000 hours or
so tho. My 2012 F70 just rolled 1500 so it is about half done.

—————-

My 1994 Mercury Grand Markus just rolled over 127xxx


That is probably 3500 hours or so. How much was in salt water ;-)


I should have called you guys when my dad died in the early 1970s and I
wanted to sell his 1931 Model A truck fitted with a hoist, his 1948 Jeep
wagon, and his 1949 Jeepster "sportscar," all lovingly restored and
maintained. :)


Tim June 11th 18 06:05 PM

It’s real.....
 

On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 20:54:53 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


- show quoted text -
That is probably 3500 hours or so. How much was in salt water ;-)

———/-

None that I know of Greg. It’s alwai been a fresh lake craft. I looked over the toons and no pitting that I could tell

[email protected] June 11th 18 07:00 PM

It’s real.....
 
On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 10:05:21 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 20:54:53 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


- show quoted text -
That is probably 3500 hours or so. How much was in salt water ;-)

———/-

None that I know of Greg. It’s alwai been a fresh lake craft. I looked over the toons and no pitting that I could tell


I was really talking about your 127k mile Mercury but that is good
news on the pontoon.
Pitting on the pontoons will be right at the water line and the spider
cracks will be at the welds where it joins to the risers. Usually they
are in the back one or two.
The other thing that can crack welds is hitting something hard with
one pontoon and "racking" the boat. Again it usually shows up in the
corners. If in doubt, pressure test the toons and look around with
soapy water in a spray bottle. A shop vac on "blow" is plenty of
pressure for that.
The other thing you want to look at is the deck rotting. Look at the
edges of the sheets and at penetrations. That is where it starts.
If everything was sealed well, the deck will last decades.

Tim June 11th 18 07:25 PM

It’s real.....
 

On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 10:05:21 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 20:54:53 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


- show quoted text -
That is probably 3500 hours or so. How much was in salt water ;-)

———/-

None that I know of Greg. It’s alwai been a fresh lake craft. I looked over the toons and no pitting that I could tell


I was really talking about your 127k mile Mercury but that is good
news on the pontoon.
Pitting on the pontoons will be right at the water line and the spider
cracks will be at the welds where it joins to the risers. Usually they
are in the back one or two.
The other thing that can crack welds is hitting something hard with
one pontoon and "racking" the boat. Again it usually shows up in the
corners. If in doubt, pressure test the toons and look around with
soapy water in a spray bottle. A shop vac on "blow" is plenty of
pressure for that.
The other thing you want to look at is the deck rotting. Look at the
edges of the sheets and at penetrations. That is where it starts.
If everything was sealed well, the deck will last decades.

..........

I’ve looked it over well for cracks etc. honestly, I can’t find a dent in anything. The very front tip of the left hand tube is slightly bent but not enough to make an issue about.
And the boat is plank on nstead of sheets. Interesting. I haven’t found anything to be concerned about with the exception that I’m going to get a new transom engine mount. The wood is getting a bit spongy looking. It’s gotta go.


[email protected] June 11th 18 09:40 PM

It’s real.....
 
On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 11:25:02 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 10:05:21 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


On Sun, 10 Jun 2018 20:54:53 -0700 (PDT), Tim
wrote:


- show quoted text -
That is probably 3500 hours or so. How much was in salt water ;-)

———/-

None that I know of Greg. It’s alwai been a fresh lake craft. I looked over the toons and no pitting that I could tell


I was really talking about your 127k mile Mercury but that is good
news on the pontoon.
Pitting on the pontoons will be right at the water line and the spider
cracks will be at the welds where it joins to the risers. Usually they
are in the back one or two.
The other thing that can crack welds is hitting something hard with
one pontoon and "racking" the boat. Again it usually shows up in the
corners. If in doubt, pressure test the toons and look around with
soapy water in a spray bottle. A shop vac on "blow" is plenty of
pressure for that.
The other thing you want to look at is the deck rotting. Look at the
edges of the sheets and at penetrations. That is where it starts.
If everything was sealed well, the deck will last decades.

.........

I’ve looked it over well for cracks etc. honestly, I can’t find a dent in anything. The very front tip of the left hand tube is slightly bent but not enough to make an issue about.
And the boat is plank on nstead of sheets. Interesting. I haven’t found anything to be concerned about with the exception that I’m going to get a new transom engine mount. The wood is getting a bit spongy looking. It’s gotta go.


Yup you don't want your motor falling off in the lake. I had to do the
wood in mine about 28 years ago ;-)
If this is the regular 1.5" keystone looking piece that fits in an
aluminum motor pod, 2 pieces of 3/4" Exterior grade AC plywood
laminated together with waterproof Tite Bond and screwed with
stainless screws will last for quite a while if you seal it with epoxy
resin after you get it assembled. Just be sure to seal the holes where
you mount the motor.
That dent on the nose is what I was talking about when I said hitting
something with one pontoon. Look to see if there is water in them and
do a pressure test for leaks. A TIG guy can fix them pretty easily.

Tim June 12th 18 12:06 PM

It’s real.....
 

On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 11:25:02 -0700 (PDT), Tim
- show quoted text -
Yup you don't want your motor falling off in the lake. I had to do the
wood in mine about 28 years ago ;-)
If this is the regular 1.5" keystone looking piece that fits in an
aluminum motor pod, 2 pieces of 3/4" Exterior grade AC plywood
laminated together with waterproof Tite Bond and screwed with
stainless screws will last for quite a while if you seal it with epoxy
resin after you get it assembled. Just be sure to seal the holes where
you mount the motor.
That dent on the nose is what I was talking about when I said hitting
something with one pontoon. Look to see if there is water in them and
do a pressure test for leaks. A TIG guy can fix them pretty easily.


.........


I’m thinking that while I’m pulling the engine anyhow I might as well mount the 115. 80 hp sounds big but this is a big pontoon. I’m not into speed but don’t want to be loaded down and maybe break 20 knots

Keyser Soze June 12th 18 12:11 PM

It’s real.....
 
On 6/12/18 7:06 AM, Tim wrote:

On Mon, 11 Jun 2018 11:25:02 -0700 (PDT), Tim
- show quoted text -
Yup you don't want your motor falling off in the lake. I had to do the
wood in mine about 28 years ago ;-)
If this is the regular 1.5" keystone looking piece that fits in an
aluminum motor pod, 2 pieces of 3/4" Exterior grade AC plywood
laminated together with waterproof Tite Bond and screwed with
stainless screws will last for quite a while if you seal it with epoxy
resin after you get it assembled. Just be sure to seal the holes where
you mount the motor.
That dent on the nose is what I was talking about when I said hitting
something with one pontoon. Look to see if there is water in them and
do a pressure test for leaks. A TIG guy can fix them pretty easily.


........


I’m thinking that while I’m pulling the engine anyhow I might as well mount the 115. 80 hp sounds big but this is a big pontoon. I’m not into speed but don’t want to be loaded down and maybe break 20 knots



Actually, speed might help your slow-wittedness.

Tim June 12th 18 12:27 PM

It’s real.....
 

6:11 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text -
Actually, speed might help your slow-wittedness.

......

Why do you say that? Your imaginary Ducati never helped yours....

Keyser Soze June 12th 18 12:34 PM

It’s real.....
 
On 6/12/18 7:27 AM, Tim wrote:

6:11 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text -
Actually, speed might help your slow-wittedness.

.....

Why do you say that? Your imaginary Ducati never helped yours....



I was referring to methamphetamine, aka speed. Taking some might help
your slow-wittedness.

John H.[_5_] June 12th 18 12:56 PM

It’s real.....
 
On Tue, 12 Jun 2018 07:34:32 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:

On 6/12/18 7:27 AM, Tim wrote:

6:11 AMKeyser Soze
- show quoted text -
Actually, speed might help your slow-wittedness.

.....

Why do you say that? Your imaginary Ducati never helped yours....



I was referring to methamphetamine, aka speed. Taking some might help
your slow-wittedness.


Was discussing you with a friend, Harry. Given that you're a lying, narcissistic asshole, we decided
that you could improve yourself greatly by giving up the lying. Of course, you'd still be a
narcissistic asshole, so the improvement might not win many friends.

But, might be worth a try, eh Krause?


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