jimmwaller
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2013
- Messages
- 265
Hi all,
I have a riveted boat that seems to have some leaks in it. when I fill it up with water, I get some solid dripping, probably a cup in like 15 minutes. I picked up some gluvit, but I also have a hand riveter. I thought about just rebucking, but I worry that I'll either mess it up or maybe it just won't help (my boat is from the 50's, I worry that the sealant between the panels is just too old and that rebucking isn't the best option).
I wonder if some combination of the gluvit and reriveting would be best? But then, should I rerivet first? Or gluvit first? Or just use gluvit by itself?
I worry that if I rerivet first, I may be making the seams to small for gluvit to really get everwhere. but if I gluvit first, could riveting like crack the gluvit? or will it just compress?
Or will gluvit just be fine alone?
Any thoughts would be appreciated, thanks!
I have a riveted boat that seems to have some leaks in it. when I fill it up with water, I get some solid dripping, probably a cup in like 15 minutes. I picked up some gluvit, but I also have a hand riveter. I thought about just rebucking, but I worry that I'll either mess it up or maybe it just won't help (my boat is from the 50's, I worry that the sealant between the panels is just too old and that rebucking isn't the best option).
I wonder if some combination of the gluvit and reriveting would be best? But then, should I rerivet first? Or gluvit first? Or just use gluvit by itself?
I worry that if I rerivet first, I may be making the seams to small for gluvit to really get everwhere. but if I gluvit first, could riveting like crack the gluvit? or will it just compress?
Or will gluvit just be fine alone?
Any thoughts would be appreciated, thanks!