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#1
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Greetings,
Picked up a used Old Town Royalex canoe recently and am looking for good maintenance tips. One chip on outer skin to repair, any advice on polishing surface? Wooden gunwhales appears to have some aging that I wonder if I approach the way I would with a wooden deck...strip, rewaterproof. I won't spend 100's of hours for maintenance, what is most effective use of time to maintain? Dave |
#2
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![]() "Mountain Dave" wrote in message ... Greetings, Picked up a used Old Town Royalex canoe recently and am looking for good maintenance tips. One chip on outer skin to repair, any advice on polishing surface? Wooden gunwhales appears to have some aging that I wonder if I approach the way I would with a wooden deck...strip, rewaterproof. I won't spend 100's of hours for maintenance, what is most effective use of time to maintain? Dave If the chip is deep, clean it, alcohol it, then fill with a bit of epoxy. Krylon paint works great on Royalex and offers some protection from UV. Lightly sand the gunwales and then use Watco on them. It's simple and they'll look brand new. Keep it simple. |
#3
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"MLL" wrote in message
m... "Mountain Dave" wrote in message ... Greetings, Picked up a used Old Town Royalex canoe recently and am looking for good maintenance tips. ... ... Keep it simple. What MLL said. Old Town will be happy to sell you a color-matched kit for fixing the vinyl skin of the Royalex. 303 Protectant every month or so will prevent future UV damage. If the boat was so bad that I'd want to paint it, I hope I wouldn't have bought it in the first place. Take a stab at the gunnels in a few places with a pen knife blade to check for basic soundness. On a used boat, I would loosen enough of the gunnels to sample the inner wood. I once had gunnels that crumbled from the inside from some kind of fungal attack, leaving only a hard shell where I had faithfully oiled them. Sanding, then Watco or boiled linseed + turpentine on the gunnels is all you should need. I usually try to do the gunnels before 303ing the hull, because the 303 overspray on the gunnels seems to interfere with the oil. On the other hand, it might be true that 303 on the gunnels might be preferable to using the oil at all. I just dunno. If you have wood decks, their undersides are favorite sites for rot. If you find it, browse the West Systems website for woodrot restoration products. There are some penetrating epoxys that are supposed to fix it, though I've never tried them. The protected wood (seats, thwarts, etc.) ought to get more attention. Sanding, bleaching if you insist, and a couple coats of spar varnish should fix these parts. Cruise the web for details on finishing marine brightwork. I used to make a big ritualistic thing out of spring preparation of the boat, waiting for perfect weather, masking off the Royalex, incantations, drums, dancing, ... Now, I flow some linseed on the wood every couple of weeks and wipe off the overmess. The boat seems to be just as happy. Remember that the whole point is to be out on the water, not in the garage. Hth, Fred Klingener |
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