Sounds a little crazy, but we are talking about a non-profit Girl Scout
Troop. Try contacting actual spray in bed liner companies to see it they
would be willing to donate a spraying in a light coat to seal them up.

 

We have a local fiberglass repair shop that is always up for a charitable
donation. He even replaced a bow going back 4-5 feet on each side when a
boat that got loose in a storm kissed a concrete dock head on that was
donated to our local fleet.

 

Also try contacting Sears. It would be just like them to have paint on
sealer in a can.

 

Phil Agur                  - my
<http://www.cuttergraphics.com/N-trak/index.htm> NTrak Odds N Ends

 <http://capitolcityntrak.org/> Capitol City N-Trak - All DCC - Sacramento,
CA

Mid Century N- California - SP, WP, SF, UP, TWS, and others. 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, August 15, 2007 4:42 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Aluminum boat repair

 


Tommy, There is a rubbery compound between the overlapping sheets of
aluminum.  I think the heat from a torch will do very bad things to it.  One
suggestion was get some spray-on truck bedliner from Walmart, and spray it
on the inside after washing the inside with xylene.  Another was 3M 5200. 
Jim 





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08/15/2007 04:00 PM 


Please respond to
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Re: catalina27-talk: Aluminum boat repair

 


 

 




Someone makes a tube of silver "stuff" that you melt into the joints, and
over the rivets with a propane torch. cannot remember the name of it, but it
works GREAT (aluma seal comes to mind) 
  
Tommy, 




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