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  #1  
Old 01-25-2007, 04:02 PM
oldbluesplayer oldbluesplayer is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: New Hampshire
Posts: 387
Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

John - how wet was it ? are you pulling out the gas tank ?

I'm going to suggest that you pull the tank, and check the condition of the tank platform - when you do that, you will also have exposed the sides of the stringer boxes - the one that is wet, you could then drill a series of holes into the stringer box, and allow it to drain, then glass over those holes, before you (probably) replace the gas tank platform - this would be a whole lot easier than taking the top off the stringerbox and replacing the foam - a move which I would highly Not suggest, as it interferes with the structural integrity of the stringer box - not that that can't be done, but it requires a much more strenuous fiberglass layup to correct.

just my .02

by the way - where in western Mass ? I'm in south central NH, would be a fairly easy day trip to pop down and check in and see what you're up to ?

Bill
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  #2  
Old 01-25-2007, 05:02 PM
Bigshrimpin Bigshrimpin is offline
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Location: Onset, MA
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

I'd just drill a few holes in the base of the stringer and leave them wide open. A few little holes aren't going to cause any structural issues and it will allow water in the stringer to escape and foam to dry out.
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  #3  
Old 01-25-2007, 05:40 PM
bigeasy1 bigeasy1 is offline
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Location: western massachusetts
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

Bill,we already pulled the tank,it's in good shape,and the platform underneath it is solid.It's funny, as we were just saying last night,that maybe we should drill a few holes in the box,and let the water drain out as much as possible.It's hard to tell how wet it is,because it's frozen right now,but the dry foam is soft,and the frozen stuff is a little less than halfway up.

I have the boat completely enclosed, in a tarped in scaffold enclousure,that is 12'high x 15'wide x 30'long.I run a couple heaters in it when i'm working on it,but shut them off when i'm not,so it freezes up at night.
I can get the inside up to the mid to high fifties when its in the high twenties to low thirties outside.


I have a friend in the fiberglass and resin supply business helping me out with the technical info,and hands on lessons with the glass work,so thats a huge help to me.If this boat isn't as great as everyone says,his head is on the block,because he's the guy responsible for making me have to put on that dreadful tyvek suit,and work my a-s off.I'm kidding of course,but he was the guy who kept telling me that i should try to find an old Seacraft,because they're so good.

Hey,sure bill,it'd be great to have you pay a visit,i live in Wilbraham Ma.,it's a little bit east of springfield,near Ludlow and Palmer.I'm about 40 miles west of Worcester 10-15 minutes off I-90.Feel free to give me a call at 413-596-8091,if i'm not home, leave a message i'll call you back.
__________________
All this,just for a boat ride
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  #4  
Old 01-26-2007, 01:38 PM
Bobv Bobv is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Savannah, Georgia
Posts: 56
Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

John,

Do you know how the stringer foam got wet in the first place? When I took off the floor of my boat, both stringers were saturated. On the port side, where the fuel fill line crossed the stringer, the glass had delaminated and was letting in water.

I was thinking like you are and drilled holes to allow the foam to dry out. Two MONTHS later, water was sill coming out of the holes.

I finally decided to cut out the tops and completely re foam. It is impossible to describe the weight difference between the still saturated foam and the dry. I couldn't believe it.

It was time consuming and expensive, but I'm glad I completely fixed the problem.



This foam looks dry, but it wasn't, and it weighed a ton.

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  #5  
Old 01-26-2007, 02:11 PM
oldbluesplayer oldbluesplayer is offline
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Location: New Hampshire
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

John - I did a mapquest thing, looks like an easy 1.5 hr ride - I'll definitely have to drop down this spring.

all I'm gonna say, and you won't grasp it till you get out on the water, is that your friend was right - I'd had 5 boats before, and was intimately familiar with several more boats that my brother has had - when I was shopping this time, and encountered my Seafari as a possibility, several people I talked to, knowledgeable boaters, when I said, "70's SeaCraft" simply replied... "Buy It !" It was such an abrupt and overt reaction, repeated several times, I found it very hard to believe.

2 years later... I Believe. And I know, after gathering with the SeaCraft clan herein, last summer in Cape Cod Bay, that my 20' Seafari has nowhere near the capability, that your 23' Sceptre has.

I know you're useage thinking is headed towards the Great Lakes for salmon, but you're gonna have to join us this summer in the Bay, as I expect there will be another CSC Gathering.

Bill
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  #6  
Old 01-26-2007, 05:41 PM
Ed Ed is offline
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Join Date: May 2002
Location: Boston
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

OldBluesPlayer-

Don't be so fast to underestimate your 20' Seafari. I've been out with CSICKNICK on his Seafari in large seas during November and the boat was fine. I wish I could say the same for me....I was so nervous, I made him head back in.
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  #7  
Old 01-26-2007, 10:34 PM
dcobbett dcobbett is offline
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Location: Swampscott, MA
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

John123,

Bonefish's comments about the cuts in the stringer for the fuel hoses letting in water made me think about the hull I'm working on. Have you ever crawled under your hull when it was thawed out and tapped on the bottom along the panel under the stringers? If so, was the sound different than what you heard when you tapped on the adjacent panels?
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  #8  
Old 01-27-2007, 01:19 AM
Bigshrimpin Bigshrimpin is offline
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Location: Onset, MA
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

Quote:
OldBluesPlayer-

Don't be so fast to underestimate your 20' Seafari. I've been out with CSICKNICK on his Seafari in large seas during November and the boat was fine. I wish I could say the same for me....I was so nervous, I made him head back in.
Gotta second what ED is saying. 20 is very nimble and seaworthy. The old owner of my 20MA used to fish 70miles offshore at guide and pioneer seamounts in nasty pacific ocean.

BoneFish is probably be right, but I'd still try with the holes first. Hit the stringer with a line of holes every 12" to 18" with a 1" hole saw . . . . save the plugs. It's not going to dry out overnight, but using a fan and heater you could probably get away without pulling the boat apart . . . Especially b/c it's just one side and just the very bottom of that one stringer.
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  #9  
Old 01-27-2007, 10:50 AM
1bayouboy 1bayouboy is offline
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Mount Pleasant, SC
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Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

You can also tape the end of the hose from a small wet vac
to the holes and use a little vacuum to get out standing water....it dries faster when it's down to just damp.
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  #10  
Old 01-27-2007, 07:59 PM
oldbluesplayer oldbluesplayer is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: New Hampshire
Posts: 387
Default Re: Wet stringer foam question

Trident & Big - I don't so much underestimate my Seafari, as I do me -

Last summer I went over to Martha's Vineyard for a couple days, a couple of beautiful days, and fished with my son and my brother on his 23' SeaBird - life was good !!

Sunday morning we set out to come back, life was not so good - so I had the opportunity to push the 20' Seafari thru close coupled 5-8's, stuffing my bow plenty of times, driving that boat over each and every wave, one hand on the wheel, one hand on the throttle - get to the crest, and go forward or drop back off - it had a nasty little cross swell going on, too - I had green water come right up over the foredeck, and up over the windshield several times - and I was running with plugs in the scuppers - adding to the nervousness - I did pause long enough somewhere to pull those out -

I've also learned about running the mouth of the Merrimack, that's a whole nother fun game, with it's frequent standing waves on the outgoing tide/ incoming swell

believe me, after that, 10 ft rollers would be easy - like the stuff commonly seen south of MV on a good day

Bottom Line - the 20' Seafari is a Little Giant - I know what IT can do, just not sure sure how often I want to go there !!!

Bill
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