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[email protected] July 23rd 04 04:36 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?

Gould 0738 July 23rd 04 04:51 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
You can use a two part epoxy putty for an "emergency" repair, but I wouldn't
trust it for any longer than it took to get the boat hauled and properly
restored. Personally would never slap on some goop and then take off on a
holiday cruise as if there were no problem.

IBNFSHN July 23rd 04 05:20 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
Davis makes a product called "Slick Seam Compound" that can be applied
underwater. I've never used it but it may be worth looking into. Found it in
a West Marine catalog.

--
Bill
Chesapeake, Va


wrote in message
...
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?




Jeepers July 23rd 04 05:24 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
In article iVaMc.7901$fB4.1955@lakeread01, "IBNFSHN"
wrote:

According to a recent TV commercial I saw, use a tampon.

--
Member AAAAAAAA
American Association Against Acronym Abuse And Also Ambiguity.

MikeG July 23rd 04 05:48 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
In article ,
says...
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?

You may want to look at RayCrete

http://www.leevalley.com/garden/page...D5&ccurrency=2
&page=44730&category=2,42194,40727


--
MikeG
Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net


MikeG July 23rd 04 05:50 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
In article ,
says...
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?



You may want to look at RayCrete

http://www.leevalley.com/garden/page...D5&ccurrency=2
&page=44730&category=2,42194,40727


--
MikeG
Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net


Chris Newport July 23rd 04 09:25 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
On Friday 23 July 2004 4:36 pm in rec.boats wrote:


Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?


There are several expensive varieties of snake oil available from
chandlers, but the traditional patch is best.
Slather a good layer of bitumin onto a piece of canvas and slap it
over the hole. Smooth the patch over (a roller is a good idea) and
water pressure will keep it in place.
When the boat is pulled just pull off the patch and clean up with
kerosene or white spirit..


--
My real address is crn (at) netunix (dot) com
WARNING all messages containing attachments or html will be silently
deleted. Send only plain text.


HLAviation July 23rd 04 10:25 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
Splash Zone
wrote in message
...
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?




Short Wave Sportfishing July 23rd 04 11:45 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
On Fri, 23 Jul 2004 11:24:01 -0500, Jeepers
wrote:

In article iVaMc.7901$fB4.1955@lakeread01, "IBNFSHN"
wrote:

According to a recent TV commercial I saw, use a tampon.


Damn, beat me to it. :)

Later,

Tom

HLAviation July 24th 04 07:55 AM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
That won't stop a leak. It's kinda a waxy paste to smear in the planking
seams of a wood boat below the waterline. Doesn't work particularly well for
that either.

"IBNFSHN" wrote in message
news:iVaMc.7901$fB4.1955@lakeread01...
Davis makes a product called "Slick Seam Compound" that can be applied
underwater. I've never used it but it may be worth looking into. Found it

in
a West Marine catalog.

--
Bill
Chesapeake, Va


wrote in message
...
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?






[email protected] July 24th 04 05:42 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
On 23 Jul 2004 15:51:24 GMT, (Gould 0738) wrote:

You can use a two part epoxy putty for an "emergency" repair,


That will work under water?

but I wouldn't
trust it for any longer than it took to get the boat hauled and properly
restored. Personally would never slap on some goop and then take off on a
holiday cruise as if there were no problem.



Gould 0738 July 24th 04 07:23 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
You can use a two part epoxy putty for an "emergency" repair,

That will work under water?


Some of them are specifically designed to work underwater, yes.

Bob La Londe July 28th 04 03:43 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
Anyway you can. When I first read the topis I figured emergency situation.
We have plugged leaky rubber boats witha wooden plug on flaot trips.
Recently when flaoting a sunk canoe for salvage ont he river I used a couple
pieces of torn rags to plug two large holes in the hull. In a gas tank
after tearingit up offroading in a car and beating the tank off some rocks I
plugged a hole temproarily by mixing up some ribbon epoxy putting it over
the hole, and sticking a screw through it.

Seriously... If you plan to fix this right soon I might be tempted to just
stuff something in the hole.

--
** FREE Fishing Lures
** Weekly drawing
** Public Fishing and Boating Forums
** www.YumaBassMan.com


wrote in message
...
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?




Harvey Arkawy July 28th 04 09:39 PM

How to temporarily stop a leak?
 
There is a two part weld called Harvey's Plummer's Weld. It should be
available at most plumbing parts stores. It comes in a tube with one
of the two components inside the other. Pull off a hunk and knead
them together like clay. The patch can be applied under water as it
is designed to stop water leaks; even under pressure.

Good luck.... And remember, the Captain goes down with his ship! {:-)


wrote in message . ..
Hi,

We've got a steel hull houseboat. Recently we pulled it
to work on the outdrive, and when it went back in it
began leaking. Swimming under the boat I found that
about 2" of a plate weld has rusted and cracked. The
inlet for the toilet's water is right beside the leak, and it
looks to me like the hole in that location weakened the
weld, so the stress from being on the trailer was enough
to crack it.

Most of the rest of the bottom looks in pretty fair shape,
though it will need to be pulled and at least painted
before too long. Can anyone suggest a good way to
temporarily plug the leak for a while? Is there anything
that can be applied under water, but won't be too hard
to remove later when the boat is pulled and fixed correctly?



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