My boat broke its mooring and was damaged.
Insurance company wrote it off, (repair costs were higher than agreed value - because of labour), i bought it back and am now in the process of repairing it.
Thread here; http://forum.woodenboat.com/showthre...ew-Deck/page17 From about page 17 I'm dealing with the current (involuntary) issue. (Page 1 gives you some insight into the boat, age/history).
Repair includes bringing the boat back to bare wood.
First she was sand blasted, gently but with predictable (minor) consequences, and now I am in the process of sanding off the remaining paint and making her fair again.
IMG_6869.jpg
IMG_6875.jpg
I want to consider sheathing her in epoxy and fiberglass.
I have been reluctant to sheath for a number of reasons, examples;
A) - the hull is sound, the planking and framing are sound, the caulking is sound. She is in general good health. (but she is aging).
B) - water ingress under the sheathing. How do i deal with areas for example around the ballast - how do i prevent water ingress and the glass working away....?
C) - Scale - am i just introducing a bloody huge job, with attendant costs, without a good reason.
D) - Won't the movement of the hull crack the glass and then - water ingress under the sheathing....? Note the hull is sound and there is no discernible movement of the planks (when she's not getting buffeted onto a beach). Caulking is good as of before sand blasting, now some of the compound is flaking out.
The Pros are fewer BUT persuasive;
i) simply protecting the boat. I must admit i lay awake nights, from about 9 months plus after haul out, worrying about worms. I've had debris catch my mooring line and knock bottom paint off - so emergency haul out for repairs below the waterline = expensive and time consuming.
ii) Longevity - I know there is a sentiment expressed in post #5 here; https://forums.ybw.com/index.php?thr...eathing.79345/, but - with a sound boat, given what we know about modern materials - this could be a reliable way of protecting this boat indefinitely. Given the positive condition of the boat - encapsulating it now could be a genuinely good thing.
Questions to start off with;
-Process for reliably sheathing the hull.
-Thickness of cloth, type, number of layers.
-Do i need to drop the ballast off? Do i glass over it too?
-Do i need to glass the inside as well? (Who was that french dude?)