Check out Ceatol Marine, if you want a varnish look with a longer life span. Oil is oil and needs constant care, and never looks a good as well cared for finish. If varnish is your choice, consider using the teak cleaner and brightener like "Tek It". Letting the teak go to gray is another option, but nothing beats nice bright work to help sell a boat. Well cared for on the outside often leaves a potential buyer with the feeling that the boat is most likely well cared for in the inside. It's about pride of ownership.
Herb Clark
[email protected]

Chico Yacht Club
s/v Imagine - Catalina 270
s/v Hotel Charlie - Catalina 25'
d/s Coyote - Coronado 15'

"Why sail a blow when I can tow?"





On Mar 30, 2010, at 8:34 AM, [email protected] wrote:

I usually just lurk and learn, but have two questions: I have stripped teak and can't decide whether to oil or varnish. I prefer varnish but am selling boat(hopefully) this spring and wonder which might be preferred by buyers. Second, does anyone know where I can get a replacement teak "eyebrow". The part that goes on the hatch stern side. Don't ask.
Bill Walker
Pentwater, Mi.

Sent from my BlackBerry device from Cincinnati Bell Wireless

From: "Judith Blumhorst, DC" <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2010 08:15:25 -0700 (PDT)
To: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [IC27A] a rudder with a mind of it's own



LOL!  Aint that the troof.

Judy B

From: "Sneddon, Keith - ES/IS" <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, March 30, 2010 6:42:01 AM
Subject: RE: [IC27A] a rudder with a mind of it's own





Reverse is just a mess. Hydrodynamically, nothing works right in this direction. Try to back up as infrequently as possible.







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