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I'm going to have to do some work to my transom this winter. It's gotten soft and needs to be replaced. I'm up to the work, but I came across this product called SeaCast which is a bonding formula that you fill your transom with instead of wood. You cut a strip off the top of the fiberglass and remove all the wood, chiseling, drilling, etc. and fill the void with this stuff and it bonds with all the contact spots and any leftover wood for a waterproof structure. Supposedly it won't rot or crack. Any thoughts?
It runs about 200 bucks per 5 gallons and I think I'd need about two of those portions. It's a 2 3/4" void about 3' high and about 7 1/2' across. It's probably about the same cost as getting all the materials for an entire new transom (wood, glass and all the fixin's), but it's much easier and less invasive. It would allow me to keep the original boxes and splash pan in front of the motor.
Just curious if anyone else had worked with the stuff before. Their website can be found at www.transomrepair.net
It runs about 200 bucks per 5 gallons and I think I'd need about two of those portions. It's a 2 3/4" void about 3' high and about 7 1/2' across. It's probably about the same cost as getting all the materials for an entire new transom (wood, glass and all the fixin's), but it's much easier and less invasive. It would allow me to keep the original boxes and splash pan in front of the motor.
Just curious if anyone else had worked with the stuff before. Their website can be found at www.transomrepair.net