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nymack66
06-08-2011, 08:37 PM
I did not wanted to jack the previous tread so I am posting here, My Hull is an 1984 V20 Cuddy, the floor looks 100% original.
There is NO FOAM anywhere, I did check...What am I missing?

phatdaddy
06-08-2011, 10:29 PM
ny, mine is an 84 and foamless, also. only foam is in the fuel cell.

chart
06-09-2011, 01:13 AM
Mine is an 86 and around the fuel tank is the only place i have seen foam.

fishnfetch
06-09-2011, 05:50 AM
mine is and 88 and now im not so sure there is foam. i figured it would be on the outboard side of the stringers. :head::head:

tsubaki
06-09-2011, 05:59 AM
Somewhere about 1977 the Coast Guard mandated floatation in boats up to a certain length, can't remember the length.
It is there, just likely in key locations.
I don't know if sealed air pockets were allowed to count as floatation.

spareparts
06-09-2011, 06:13 AM
look up under the gunnels, there's spray foam in there. The boat is supposed to float level full of water, too much flotation in the bottom would make it flip over when full of water. I believe flotation was required up to 20 ft, so your V may not have any. We used to have a 20 Sea Ox, not a bit of foam in it, just a bunch of soggy wood

willy
06-09-2011, 07:48 AM
I have seen three V20's in various stages of project on the floors, all three had foam around the fuel tank, two of them had some foam in the area near the junction of the hull bottom and the hull sides around mid ship and a little forward and a little around the back corners. Nothing I would call being foamed in.
One had just the foam around the tank.

nymack66
06-09-2011, 08:30 AM
Excellent feedback, I DID find foam around the fuel tank when I replace it during my restoration. However its the only area with foam period.
Here is a picture of her with 30 gallons of fuel, two batteries 100 lbs, 58 lb kicker, two full coolers with coolant and ice. She floats really high in my honest opinion..
http://i527.photobucket.com/albums/cc357/amackhrandilal/Ski%20Island%202011/IMG_0177.jpg

reelapeelin
06-09-2011, 08:44 AM
My 95 V21 had foam in the cavity between stringers and gunwales from bow to stern....that cavity wasn't FULL of foam, but had several inches of it sprayed/stuck to the bottom...wasn't OVERDONE that's for sure...w/rod-boxes out, you could see foam below where they sat...


And I must say, NY Mack...you sure got a PURDY V20!!...nice work!!...how 'bout some inside shots...what did you do around the front of the splashwell?...

RidgeRunner
06-09-2011, 09:00 AM
Floating high is right. You sure she isn't sitting on the bottom. LOL That V is looking better than ever. :love: 1983 center console had foam a plenty like Reel's. Fuel tank was foamed plus the entire area outside of the center stringers front to rear. I shoveled it all out. It was dry, so I replaced it after glassing in a few replacement pieces. Foam had to stiffen up the hull a little, I could stand on it.

SkunkBoat
06-11-2011, 05:47 PM
My 84 has it around fuel tank, that's it.

And I agree that your boat seems to float unusually high. I thought maybe it was grounded or listing away from the camera

Also, did you move the fuel fill? and the scuppers?

MAC67
06-11-2011, 07:47 PM
Ok, total newb question here, (sorry for the high jack) what the heck are scuppers?

Destroyer
06-11-2011, 08:04 PM
Ok, total newb question here, (sorry for the high jack) what the heck are scuppers?

Basically scuppers are drains on a boat. They allow water that has come onboard to drain back into the sea automatically. On large boats they are openings that are welded into the deck rail.
On Wellcraft boats they are holes in the back near the transom that allow the water to drain off the deck (sometimes called the cockpit) ... hence the term "self-bailing cockpit" that you'll find occasionally.
The main difference between a drain and a scupper is that a drain just allows water to drain into the bilge, below the water line, where your bilge pump must remove it, and a scupper is on a deck that is high enough above the water line to allow the water to drain back into the sea without the need for a pump.