Beautiful day for boat restoration fun! Charged the batteries for the drill, got my tools out and my ladder (so I can climb into the boat) and after removing the stored sheets of foam and miscellaneous items I was standing on the boat hull again. Looked everything over to see where I left off last fall and decided to remove some bolts from the gunwales and from under the bow. Next I drilled out the stern rivets holding the rubber rub rail with a 3/16 dia. drill bit. I expected each rubber rail to just pull out from the aluminum as I pulled on the stern end. Not so. I thought the bow end of the rubber rail was just pushed into the aluminum bow nose cap along with the aluminum rail channel. Not so on that one either. The port side rubber rail was loose from the aluminum rail channel and both were hanging to the ground from that aluminum bow cap. Finally I realized that the bow cap had to come off (thought the rub rail assembly was caught up in there). Getting that aluminum bow cap off was a chore. I finally had to resort to using a chisel and hammer to cut the rivets off on the inside bottom of the cap in order to be able to move the cap...and it still would not come off. I had to use a pry bar to loosen and remove the aluminum cap and luckily there wasn't any damage though I sure spent some time on that task! Once the bow cap was off I could see that the aluminum rub rails were two separate pieces, a port and a starboard channel. The actual rubber rub rail was one long piece which was secured tightly under that aluminum bow cap. Well, the Admiral and I got the port side rub rail all off and the inside port gunwale piece removed from the boat. I put all of the port side bolts and nuts into a plastic baggie and labeled the contents. Then the rubber rail was cleaned, neatly rolled and secured, and stored for the time being in the garage.
Tomorrow I hope to remove the starboard aluminum rub rail channel and the rest of the gunwale pieces. Might get lucky and get the bow top sheet off, too.
Included are a few photos of the days progress to go along with this post.
Safe boating,
Joe