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  #11  
Unread 11-24-2016, 12:20 PM
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SkunkBoat SkunkBoat is offline
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I hate to tell you... but that is shot.
I would not want to ride in that boat

If you can't handle a transom fix like mine, there is a shorter way.

Take off the aluminum trim and cut off the 1.5" strip of glass. Use a chain saw to dig out the crap as far as you can down and sideways. Clean the inside glass as best you can and pour to fill.
It will be way better than what you have now.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oe_ZmPOUCNc
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  #12  
Unread 11-24-2016, 03:56 PM
jvitiel jvitiel is offline
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Originally Posted by SkunkBoat View Post
I hate to tell you... but that is shot.
I would not want to ride in that boat

If you can't handle a transom fix like mine, there is a shorter way.

Take off the aluminum trim and cut off the 1.5" strip of glass. Use a chain saw to dig out the crap as far as you can down and sideways. Clean the inside glass as best you can and pour to fill.
It will be way better than what you have now.
Thanks Skunk,

I'm going to get some quotes but if it's too expensive, your shortcut method sounds better than just using plates. If I go that route and basically pour half the transom do you think that will make it difficult or impossible to do a proper job down the road?
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  #13  
Unread 11-24-2016, 07:37 PM
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Thanks Skunk,

I'm going to get some quotes but if it's too expensive, your shortcut method sounds better than just using plates. If I go that route and basically pour half the transom do you think that will make it difficult or impossible to do a proper job down the road?
If you can get majority of the core out it'll be the best way to do it. It'll be solid as a rock and will never be able to rot again. I'm about to do my project V-20 with that method.
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  #14  
Unread 11-24-2016, 10:40 PM
steplift20 steplift20 is offline
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What stuff do you pour there and where do you get it , and what about that stuff called git rot I heard it's pretty good on rotten wood
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  #15  
Unread 11-25-2016, 01:41 AM
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I may be wrong, but i think git-rot only works on dry rot, and even then only if the wood is still held together. Wet, rotted wood like you find in-between the fiberglass sandwich is saturated with water, so there's no room in the woods cells to absorb the git-rot liquid. In other words, it won't work.
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Last edited by Destroyer; 11-25-2016 at 08:35 AM.
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  #16  
Unread 11-25-2016, 07:39 AM
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What stuff do you pour there and where do you get it , and what about that stuff called git rot I heard it's pretty good on rotten wood
Skunk introduced me to Carbon Core. I had heard of Nida Core and I think this may be the same company just a new name. Also I've seen SeaCast pours but that stuff is a lot thicker and I think there'd be a much better chance of trapping air. CarbonCore looks like the way to go. I'm sure shipping on that kind of stuff is high. I'm fortunate enough to live close to them and when I'm ready just go buy it straight from them.
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  #17  
Unread 11-25-2016, 10:02 PM
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Originally Posted by 3 Squids View Post
Skunk introduced me to Carbon Core. I had heard of Nida Core and I think this may be the same company just a new name. Also I've seen SeaCast pours but that stuff is a lot thicker and I think there'd be a much better chance of trapping air. CarbonCore looks like the way to go. I'm sure shipping on that kind of stuff is high. I'm fortunate enough to live close to them and when I'm ready just go buy it straight from them.
Shipping would make it prohibitively expensive. I picked up mine from a distributor on Long Island. Reinforced Plastics Inc, Farmingdale.
Look up my thread here on the transom pour as well as the videos.

You should dig out well below the motorwell drains (remove the brass drain tubes before chainsawing!). So you know, 2 buckets will fill the transom up to the level of the 25" motor cutout. You might get away with one bucket if you plan and calculate the volume that you dig out

You are going to need at least 60 degree weather or a heated garage.
There are different catalyst for different temp ranges.
go on Carbon Core website and download pdf
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1984 V20 "Express" & 2003 Suzuki DF140 (SOLD!)
2000 GradyWhite 265 Express

YouTube/SkunkBoat https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC4F...znGospVOD6EJuw

Transom Rebuild https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEz94NbKCh0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oe_ZmPOUCNc
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  #18  
Unread 11-26-2016, 06:59 AM
bgreene bgreene is offline
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Originally Posted by jvitiel View Post
So I took Skunk's advice and put the motor up as far it would go and bounced with my full weight on the skeg. I'm no expert and as much as I want to remain in denial about this it looks pretty bad IMO. According to the ruler it only deflects around 1/16" of an inch but it still seems too flimsy for 200HP.

I looked at Skunk's excellent videos (thanks for the tip Phat) and I'm pretty sure I don't want to tackle that kind of a project outside over the winter. Again, if anyone knows of a pro transom guy local to the NY/NJ/Ct area please let me know. Baring that, I may go the plate route and hope it tides me over for a few years but no way can I just leave it as is.

Here are a couple vids of me jumping on it. Thoughts?

https://youtu.be/BmS3VGQKPQs

https://youtu.be/XXwN7eKPUi4
Call Eddie at J&B Boat, Westville, NJ.......he'll likely know several sources to get it done. Super good guy, straight shooter.
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