- Joined
- Sep 16, 2020
- Messages
- 59
- Reaction score
- 12
- Points
- 8
- Location
- Moosehead Lake, ME
- Model
- Adventure
Over the next few weeks I am working on repairing the accumulated wear, tear, and minor damage to the hatches on my ‘93 Adventure 20. The purpose of posting is both to seek input and share experience with other members. There are many other excellent, similar threads on the forum.
As a frame of reference:
- I am not an expert. I’m not even an experienced amateur. I’m just a willing boat owner who likes to work on non-critical stuff myself for fun and experience. I am starting out only with the information I have read on this forum and other web resources.
- my goal is to prevent the problems from getting worse, and to improve the cosmetics a little. I’m not shooting for showroom quality.
Tools and materials:
- I’m working in my unheated garage in Northern Maine. Temperature will soon start to affect product selection and performance.
- I have a few basic tools- sander, dremmel, buffer
- I have white gelcoat with pigments, bondo filler, fiberglass mat/resin, finish glaze/polish
Attached are pictures from Step 1. I am starting with the 2 hatches from the bait/storage wells behind the helm seats. The first photos show the hatches in place and some of the gel coat damage. Most of this is probably moisture related. There is no wood in the hatches. They are fiberglass and gel coat. The gel coat does not cover the rims of the hatches. It looks like the fiberglass absorbed water in places, swelled/froze, and split the gel coat. The screw areas are in decent shape. There are some larger chips, presumably from impacts. The next pictures are taken after I used the dremmel grinder to bore out the stress cracks and remove chipping gel coat.
How would you proceed? I’ll post again when I’ve completed the next step.
Thanks for any feedback... JB
As a frame of reference:
- I am not an expert. I’m not even an experienced amateur. I’m just a willing boat owner who likes to work on non-critical stuff myself for fun and experience. I am starting out only with the information I have read on this forum and other web resources.
- my goal is to prevent the problems from getting worse, and to improve the cosmetics a little. I’m not shooting for showroom quality.
Tools and materials:
- I’m working in my unheated garage in Northern Maine. Temperature will soon start to affect product selection and performance.
- I have a few basic tools- sander, dremmel, buffer
- I have white gelcoat with pigments, bondo filler, fiberglass mat/resin, finish glaze/polish
Attached are pictures from Step 1. I am starting with the 2 hatches from the bait/storage wells behind the helm seats. The first photos show the hatches in place and some of the gel coat damage. Most of this is probably moisture related. There is no wood in the hatches. They are fiberglass and gel coat. The gel coat does not cover the rims of the hatches. It looks like the fiberglass absorbed water in places, swelled/froze, and split the gel coat. The screw areas are in decent shape. There are some larger chips, presumably from impacts. The next pictures are taken after I used the dremmel grinder to bore out the stress cracks and remove chipping gel coat.
How would you proceed? I’ll post again when I’ve completed the next step.
Thanks for any feedback... JB
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