Anyone try this?
3 advantages I have so far:
1. No smell. Middle of winter and I'd be doing this in a heatable attached garage. Anything that smells in there stinks up the house and then the wife gets mad.
2. Plastic bag around the foam would keep water from coming in contact with the foam.
3. No mess. No mixing cups, quick pours, or spills.
Downside: a bit more expensive, but not by much. For $122 I can get enough bags to do my boat. $100 for the 2 gallon kit, which is more than enough.
It's a 1990 SmokerCraft and in 5-8 years I plan to upgrade to a new or newer boat. I don't need a forever solution but I don't want to screw over the next owner either. It will be kept indoors so other than cleaning or rainy day fishing, it will stay dry. The floor is aluminum, not plywood.
This seems like such a good idea, what am I not considering?
3 advantages I have so far:
1. No smell. Middle of winter and I'd be doing this in a heatable attached garage. Anything that smells in there stinks up the house and then the wife gets mad.
2. Plastic bag around the foam would keep water from coming in contact with the foam.
3. No mess. No mixing cups, quick pours, or spills.
Downside: a bit more expensive, but not by much. For $122 I can get enough bags to do my boat. $100 for the 2 gallon kit, which is more than enough.
It's a 1990 SmokerCraft and in 5-8 years I plan to upgrade to a new or newer boat. I don't need a forever solution but I don't want to screw over the next owner either. It will be kept indoors so other than cleaning or rainy day fishing, it will stay dry. The floor is aluminum, not plywood.
This seems like such a good idea, what am I not considering?