jsimmons248":ew65ero7 said:
Thanks for the fast response! Looks like you did a masterful job of rub rail repair! As I only have one area that is now leaking is there any way for me to address the leak from the inside with caulk and not go to the trouble of removing the rub rail at this time?
What would you suggest?
Well, I'd say "nix" on doing it from inside. That just never works, in my experience - and is one more thing you have to remove when you do fix it. If I wanted to get out boating prior to fixing it I guess I'd put big tape and absorbent "spot bandaids" on the inside or something like that. Or maybe make some butyl tape into a roll (worm shape) and lay it on above and below the rail, but that'd be a lot of butyl! It does clean up very easily with mineral spirits. But I hate this sort of fix (just a personality quirk).
OTOH, I didn't remove my rail either, because there were only two areas amidships on each side involving 6-8 rivets, plus one of the ends (port side) where it wraps around the transom and stops. The rest was still in good shape. I also wasn't in a good time/place to remove the entire rail on each side. The way I fixed it I think if/when the time comes to do the rest, I can leave the parts I did on as "anchors" and then "wing out" the forward and aft sections to do those (thus never having to manhandle the whole darned ~30' rail off the boat).
So as you can see, what I did was remove the black rubber insert as much as I needed to to get to the bad spots. Then I removed the bad rivets and planned and obtained the new fasteners and a tube of 3M4000. Then I cleaned and prepped (key!), and then put in the new fasteners. I "encouraged" the new caulk to fill in behind the rail extrusion on the outside of the boat (all taped off of course).
I didn't look at it as a band-aid type fix, but rather as the first sections of a repair (figuring at some point I may/will have to do other sections). To that end I did the best job I could. The "bad part" was just figuring out what to do and how to handle it, which fasteners to get, committing myself to it mentally, etc. The actual job was not that bad. I didn't have much choice as there was a gap between the rail and the boat where the rivets had let go. I keep it stored indoors, so no leaks, but I didn't plan on boating inside!