classiccat
"Captain" + Starmada Splash Of The Year 2020
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2010
- Messages
- 3,412
That stinks that you had to drive that far to see a swiss cheese hull. All of the "flex seal" was definitely a red flag.I had some how missed your above post too, thank you!
I drove to it 3.5 hrs, transom and rear bottom of it had well over a thousand small corrosion pits that looked like the deepest ones on mine. Wouldn't have taken it for $200.
The 860 acid etch isn't even being recommended by the maker?! their concern was adhesion, where mine/ours is cleaning out the pit to end the corrosion. Thoughts?
"Aluminum Adhesion - Epoxyworks" https://www.epoxyworks.com/index.php/aluminum-adhesion/
I'm not experienced looking at this corrosion and determining depth either, would you think a cheap pit gauge (like welders use on pipes) from Amazon would be a good buy for me? I need to set some type of parameters for which spots get preemptively patched and which get cleaned out and filled with marine tex...over 1/2 thru gets a patch? 3/4 thru? Or poke them all with a scratch awl and anything that goes thru gets an obvious patch and anything that doesn't gets filled?
That's a very cool 2015 adhesion study...for the record I treated my corrosion in 2013 ! I wasn't necessarily using the 860 for adhesion but to clean and passivate the aluminum pits before filling. (Alodine; ~Part-B is the industry standard for aluminum prep.) The study shows that the adhesion is very dependent on the epoxy being used. I'm curious how Marine Tex measures up...i'm guessing not nearly as good as Gflex...that stuff is amazing. I sealed my seams with Gflex...both the exterior when turtled and the interior when upright. I can tell you that after 7+ years, the marine tex seems to be holding up; i'm able to keep tabs on my handiwork using sub-deck access panels that I installed for cleaning the limber holes.
I used judgement and a pick to determine whether to patch externally. I suppose a feller could quantify the pitting using a dial gauge. You could also scribe a line onto piece of paper and measure with a ruler.