Cdnguy1980
Cadet
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2022
- Messages
- 19
Was power washing my new old boat today and found tooled silicone between the hull and upper deck sides ( where the cleats would be) is this normal? It goes from bow to stern
Yeah it was under side step/rub rail as you mentioned, I'm going to leave it still I have the boat paint stripped and then assess. There was some sort of sealant at the seams on the bow on the interior that I will be re-sealing as it was NFG due to timeWhere fiberglass hulls meet their caps, silicone is often applied to seal the seam. This is usually covered by a rub rail.
Not sure is aluminum boats get this treatment.
They do make some nowA lot of silicone is non-paintable.
A lot of silicone is non-paintable.
Most silicone caulk use acetate to cure which is caustic to aluminum.They do make some now
What should I use instead of silicone to reseal the bow plates then?Most silicone caulk use acetate to cure which is caustic to aluminum.
There are better choices for an aluminum boat and w/out seeing pix, hard to say if silicone was actually necessary.
Many areas of aluminum boats 'look' like a sealer/caulk should be used but are in fact applied to a solid sheet of aluminum so all adding caulk does is potentially trap water. Esp bad in norther climates w freeze/thaw. As an example, the keel strip and side rails on an aluminum Starcraft should never be caulked.
What about sika flex sealant?No idea what the prior owner was thinking w the red caulk, but at least they did a bad job what a mess.
It may or may not be paintable.
For the interior seams & rivets, use Gluvit not caulk, or Coat-It