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Actually, the aluminum in the pontoons holds up pretty well to sal****er
although I would never advocate permanently mooring one in sal****er, MUCH better to trailer them. Also, you can not use "normal" bottom paint on a pontoon boat (or any other metal boat for that matter. Galvanic corrosion occurs between the aluminum and the copper in the anti-fouling bottom paint unless there is an epoxy barrier put between them. There are problems with epoxy barrier coats too, but I won't go into that here. Pontoon boats are some of the lowest maintenance boats I've ever used. I helped a friend re-furbish his 'toon boat last year. It's 23 years old. All of the leaks in the pontoons were a result of poor design, not corrosion (pitting). The welder did have problems trying to weld the old aluminum and there were a few pinholes in the welds. I did some research for my friend and found a product called "Aluminox", it's a 2 part epoxy putty made just for old aluminum. My friend used this epoxy to plug the pinholes in the welds and the weak parts of the pontoons were re-enforced. We put a new marine plywood deck on and modified a few things to customize it for his needs/wants. He now has a very solid 'toon boat that should be good for another 20 years. As to your original question about why there aren't more ads for used ones. Personally, I attribute it to this, seldom do I talk to a pontoon boat owner where the pontoon boat was his first boat. The stories I hear are much like my own. I started out at 16 with a 16' jon boat, moved to a 18' center console, then to a 25' cuddy, now I have a 31' flybridge sportfishing boat. This is not mentioning that I've owned up to 5 boats at a time. Now I'm to the point where I'm getting to old to keep the sportfishing boat up. I just want something for the wife and I to putter around the intercoastal in and occasional drowned a few shrimp trying to catch fish. Pontoon boat are low maintenance (certainly not maintenance free though), low cost to buy (most are $20,000) and their cheap to operate. I can run my friends boat all day on 6 gallons of fuel . . . a day out on my sportfishing boat uses ~90 gallons, that's why it pretty only leaves the slip when someone else is paying for the fuel. BTW, if you haven't noticed, my charter boat is for sale . . . willing to take pontoon boat in trade or partial trade. :-) Later . . . Capt. Dave Fortner "Jay Chan" wrote in message om... Althought it is true will any boat, a pontoon boat can easily become solid waste/scrap aluminum if you don't take care of them. Perhaps a large percentage end up in recycling yards when the furniture goes to hell or the hulls start pitting. If you are using a pontoon in salt water you need bottom (or whole pontoon) paint. I see. This probably explains the reason why there are very few ads for used pontoon boats (most of the small number of ads for pontoon boats are for new boats). Thanks. Then I have one question: Does this also mean that rusty pontoons are very difficult to fix? Therefore, people don't even bother to fix them. I am under the impression that fiberglass boats have other sets of problem too, and probably also be difficult to fix. I don't know. I am just very puzzled. Jay Chan |
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