Scarfing a strake for repair..
Moderators: a j r, TDockside, Miles, Moderators
Scarfing a strake for repair..
I need to scarf in a piece to fix the last 3-4" of one of the strakes of my boat. The PO punched a hole in it somehow and screwed a backing block to it and packed it full of stuff. I cleaned out the hole and am curious, is there any way at all to replace just the end without removing it from the boat? Ill remove it if I have to, but that is a crapload of expensive hardware to replace!
No, John, I am not going to take the entire boat apart! lol
Thanks!
Evan
No, John, I am not going to take the entire boat apart! lol
Thanks!
Evan
Yes, you can replace a partial lap at the end. I replaced several at the transom on the starboard of my Cruisers Inc. Here is a link to a repair I made on the side of the same boat, http://thompsondockside.com/views/viewtopic.php?t=2840
I would go back far enough from the transom so that you will contact at least several ribs with new lap. I ground the scarf back 4" and made the lap over a rib. You will want to carefully remove bolts top and bottom so that you can reuse them when attaching old laps to new lap, each rib has a screw into it through lap. Save lap taken out so that you can replicate it, pay close attention to how edges of removed lap is shaped to fit into older laps and to the actual thickness of the lap, we had to plane them to get them to size. I sealed mine with 5200 when I reassembled them. I have some detail images of that repair if you need them.
Disassemble carefully and use new hardware if you can.
I would go back far enough from the transom so that you will contact at least several ribs with new lap. I ground the scarf back 4" and made the lap over a rib. You will want to carefully remove bolts top and bottom so that you can reuse them when attaching old laps to new lap, each rib has a screw into it through lap. Save lap taken out so that you can replicate it, pay close attention to how edges of removed lap is shaped to fit into older laps and to the actual thickness of the lap, we had to plane them to get them to size. I sealed mine with 5200 when I reassembled them. I have some detail images of that repair if you need them.
Disassemble carefully and use new hardware if you can.
For ginding I would use a 10,000rpm 4" grinder with 30 grit paper, I would use a utility knife to carve any remaining material. Maybe a dremel tool!
For a hole I see nothing wrong with a circular tapered plug expoxed inplace!
All this went thru my mind as my engine was trying to fly up in my Cruisers several weeks ago, after hitting a tree stump!
My boat is put together with 5200! Great till you .need to take it apart, then it's carve and grind it apart.
Believe I would make new pieces at least 18" long
For a hole I see nothing wrong with a circular tapered plug expoxed inplace!
All this went thru my mind as my engine was trying to fly up in my Cruisers several weeks ago, after hitting a tree stump!
My boat is put together with 5200! Great till you .need to take it apart, then it's carve and grind it apart.
Believe I would make new pieces at least 18" long
I used a belt sander to create scarf then chiseled and hand worked area under lap above. A multimaster tool seems to be a good choice for that area also. I reused holes from hardware to reattach new lap. Had to adjust thickness of standard marine plywood to match old dimensions.
Dry fit and trim until it fits perfect.
Dry fit and trim until it fits perfect.
Hi Guys, Nice Thread, hope some are still reading!!
Evan, I thought you were going to sell your boat!!!! Guess not, glad to hear!!;->
I have a scarf question. I was reading in some Wooden Boat forum about preparing a scarf that has some ratio of length to depth (can't recall the ratio right now). Then I saw an add for some jig your could buy for a power planer to make pristine scarfs. So I naturally assumed this is what you do, of course having to remove the strake(s) first. Well I guess not, ... do you all out there make these scarfs with belt sanders and other tools and do it by eye? If it works, it works. Seems to me you would have an issue with having a ‘rounded’ scarf on the surface due to nature of belt sanding and the joint would not be tight across the entire joint.
I was reading Danenberg's volume 2 book and he seems to cut bad portions of the strakes out square and has a procedure of measuring and fitting in a new piece using butt blocks behind the joint of the old and new piece of the strake. I don’t think I would what to see butt blocks everywhere on the inside, … perhaps these are hidden in boats he is working on. He makes one comment about scarfing them in but says you need to take the strake completely off?? So what’s the consensus here?? How have you guys out there done it?
BTW, I see in Dan's thread that he used some kind of marine bondo to feather out the new strake piece. Won't this eventually crack from vibration in the hull? Wondering how brittle this stuff is. Danenberg does not mention how he covers up the 'cracks' between the new and old work on the outside, seems to me it would be evident in the finished paint job. Whats typically done here to cover these seams?
Thanks
Some day I will have a boat to work on, ... for now its fun to live through you guys, its cheaper that way ;->, however no reward ;-<
Regards
Peter
Evan, I thought you were going to sell your boat!!!! Guess not, glad to hear!!;->
I have a scarf question. I was reading in some Wooden Boat forum about preparing a scarf that has some ratio of length to depth (can't recall the ratio right now). Then I saw an add for some jig your could buy for a power planer to make pristine scarfs. So I naturally assumed this is what you do, of course having to remove the strake(s) first. Well I guess not, ... do you all out there make these scarfs with belt sanders and other tools and do it by eye? If it works, it works. Seems to me you would have an issue with having a ‘rounded’ scarf on the surface due to nature of belt sanding and the joint would not be tight across the entire joint.
I was reading Danenberg's volume 2 book and he seems to cut bad portions of the strakes out square and has a procedure of measuring and fitting in a new piece using butt blocks behind the joint of the old and new piece of the strake. I don’t think I would what to see butt blocks everywhere on the inside, … perhaps these are hidden in boats he is working on. He makes one comment about scarfing them in but says you need to take the strake completely off?? So what’s the consensus here?? How have you guys out there done it?
BTW, I see in Dan's thread that he used some kind of marine bondo to feather out the new strake piece. Won't this eventually crack from vibration in the hull? Wondering how brittle this stuff is. Danenberg does not mention how he covers up the 'cracks' between the new and old work on the outside, seems to me it would be evident in the finished paint job. Whats typically done here to cover these seams?
Thanks
Some day I will have a boat to work on, ... for now its fun to live through you guys, its cheaper that way ;->, however no reward ;-<
Regards
Peter