- Joined
- Feb 28, 2005
- Messages
- 1,233
- Reaction score
- 240
- Points
- 63
- Location
- West Palm Beach, FL
- Model
- Sailfish
I noticed that the creeping corrosion of the aluminum transom bang cap cap on my 2007 Sailfish seemed to have accelerated over the past year. I had this same piece replaced with Grady's polyelythlene replacement on my 2005 Journey and I liked the look. In this case, the work needed to be done before I risked a wet transom.
When I got the call from the Service Manager, she said it was the dryest, most solid transom that they had done bang cap replacement on. There was a tiny bit of seepage where the port side vinyl rub-rail end cap terminates, visible in the fourth picture. That was easy to address.
Other than that, the engine compressions were all between 200 and 190 and these 16-year-old engines and the AGM batteries look like they might get us through another summer. So we're ready to travel another section of the Great Loop.
But lest I lose my main point, and not to preach, but had I put this bang cap replacement off another year I'd likely be looking at a fair bit more expensive repair.
Rob
When I got the call from the Service Manager, she said it was the dryest, most solid transom that they had done bang cap replacement on. There was a tiny bit of seepage where the port side vinyl rub-rail end cap terminates, visible in the fourth picture. That was easy to address.
Other than that, the engine compressions were all between 200 and 190 and these 16-year-old engines and the AGM batteries look like they might get us through another summer. So we're ready to travel another section of the Great Loop.
But lest I lose my main point, and not to preach, but had I put this bang cap replacement off another year I'd likely be looking at a fair bit more expensive repair.
Rob