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-   -   seacast transom (http://www.classicseacraft.com/community/showthread.php?t=19043)

doodlebug 04-17-2008 05:51 PM

Re: seacast transom
 
I used arjay ceramic pour in my transom,not seacast real
easy to use hard on drillbits, price was better also.it
holds 250's well
http://teamsouthbound.com/picturepro...afts%20028.jpg

hermco 04-17-2008 07:35 PM

Re: seacast transom
 
There are many pourable fillers available nowadays. Here is another incorporating the ceramics,

NIDA-BOND POURABLE TRANSOM COMPOUND is ceramic filled polyester exhibiting exceptional physical properties. In particular, the compressive strength has been documented by an independent testing laboratory to be 3,895 psi (ASTM 695). This is several times that of plywood and 8 to 10 times that of PVC foam. In addition, the failure mode shows elastic yielding before failure. This makes the NIDA-BOND POURABLE TRANSOM COMPOUND material an excellent choice for critical applications such as coring transoms on power boat hulls. web page

http://www.nida-core.com

weekender 11-01-2008 12:52 AM

Re: seacast transom
 
Hermco or anyone familiar, could you give me a ballpark guess how much poorable product it would take for a transome similar to this?
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...kender/19a.jpg

hermco 11-01-2008 08:22 AM

Re: seacast transom
 
web page :D

weekender 11-01-2008 10:33 AM

Re: seacast transom
 
thanks Hermco, boat is 150 miles away right now, I was hoping you had a guess, 5 gal, 10, 15?

thehermit 11-01-2008 12:00 PM

Re: seacast transom
 
Hey I know that ass end! :cool: just for the record its a marine plywood core ;)

hermco 11-01-2008 01:54 PM

Re: seacast transom
 
Do the math. :D

McGillicuddy 11-01-2008 02:06 PM

Re: seacast transom
 
Rough numbers, 2" thick, 25" transom 8' beam will be about 20.5 gallons... I suck at math so your numbers will vary. Take Hermco's advice and do the math...

dtmackey 11-04-2008 11:58 PM

Re: seacast transom
 
I looked into plywood and Nida-core materials and decided on Nida-Core pourable. I had a gallon sent and did some lamination testing and strength testing and found it to be fine for what I'm using is for in my transom with a 250 and 30" shaft. The function the core is to separate the outer skins and keep them bonded. Your strength is in the inner/outer fiberglass skins, not the core. Think of a balsa cored boat - how much strength is balsa adding???

D-

jonesg 11-27-2008 09:55 AM

Re: seacast transom
 
I just got through doing my transom w/ seacast,
its interesting stuff.

Use unwaxed poly resin,
promote it with DMA .05% by volume.
Add some cabosil to prevent the resin from draining out of the mix. A texture like thick corn syrup is a good starting point.
Store this a couple of days, catalyse with bpo (benzoyl peroxide is available at ace hardware for using with bondo putty) add chopped fibre and its ready to pour.
Just follow the seacast directions.

dimethylaniline (DMA) available from chemical suppliers, hard to track down but its out there. It must be used with BPO or the resin will not harden, its in bondo but bondo isn't too usefull.


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