john8lyons
New member
Hi All,
We've had a very wet July in Alaska and some of the deck penetrations for the bow rail hardware of the new-to-us 2008 TomCat started dripping inside. A few of these had some rust staining on the inside, which I now know is a bit of a red flag, but were not mentioned during the pre-purchase survey. I started to pull hardware to over-drill and fill with epoxy, and found 1) that the core seems to be foam, and 2) that in some of the holes the foam was variably wet. Not so wet that they were dripping inside but enough so that they would wet the end of a Q-tip pressed into the foam. I don't have a moisture meter (yet) and don't know a better way to assess how far the moisture has spread.
Instead, I taped the inside of the holes and then held the shop-vac over the outside of the holes to see whether water would be pulled out. In the wettest holes, after a minute or so, there was some water inside the plastic shroud of the vacuum hose tip. It wasn't a lot, but enough to see some drops and wet up and inch or two into the vacuum hose. I went hole to hole putting vacuum to the holes and after a few rounds no more water was being pulled out. I left the cabin fan on exhaust overnight, which was pulling ambient air in through the deck holes and hopefully provided some additional drying.
I know that the best thing to do would be to cut away the fiberglass inside and expose the core to assess, likely remove and replace some core, and then reseal the inside structure. However, weekends are short and summer is shorter in Alaska so what I'd really like to do is fill all the 'dry' holes with epoxy, butyl tape the bolts, and get back on the water. So, how much water in foam core is too much? What's the risk to sealing some wet / damp foam in with epoxy (freeze-thaw a definite issue)? Any issue with sealing it up now and adding it to the list of things to take care of in the future?
John
We've had a very wet July in Alaska and some of the deck penetrations for the bow rail hardware of the new-to-us 2008 TomCat started dripping inside. A few of these had some rust staining on the inside, which I now know is a bit of a red flag, but were not mentioned during the pre-purchase survey. I started to pull hardware to over-drill and fill with epoxy, and found 1) that the core seems to be foam, and 2) that in some of the holes the foam was variably wet. Not so wet that they were dripping inside but enough so that they would wet the end of a Q-tip pressed into the foam. I don't have a moisture meter (yet) and don't know a better way to assess how far the moisture has spread.
Instead, I taped the inside of the holes and then held the shop-vac over the outside of the holes to see whether water would be pulled out. In the wettest holes, after a minute or so, there was some water inside the plastic shroud of the vacuum hose tip. It wasn't a lot, but enough to see some drops and wet up and inch or two into the vacuum hose. I went hole to hole putting vacuum to the holes and after a few rounds no more water was being pulled out. I left the cabin fan on exhaust overnight, which was pulling ambient air in through the deck holes and hopefully provided some additional drying.
I know that the best thing to do would be to cut away the fiberglass inside and expose the core to assess, likely remove and replace some core, and then reseal the inside structure. However, weekends are short and summer is shorter in Alaska so what I'd really like to do is fill all the 'dry' holes with epoxy, butyl tape the bolts, and get back on the water. So, how much water in foam core is too much? What's the risk to sealing some wet / damp foam in with epoxy (freeze-thaw a definite issue)? Any issue with sealing it up now and adding it to the list of things to take care of in the future?
John