I'm having a slight temperature issue. I put white vinegar in the heat 
exchanger side of the cooling system and flushed it out. The temp seemed to 
stay around 165 but would jump up then come back to maybe 180. I still am going 
to flush the fresh water side but went on Torrensen Marine's website to price a 
temp sending unit and see that it is $84. Has anyone had to change the sending 
unit on a M18?
 
Dick Schmidt
Greenville, NC
Rush No More
 
 


--- On Tue, 9/7/10, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:


From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [IC27A] (no subject) - Rebedding Hardware
To: [email protected]
Date: Tuesday, September 7, 2010, 3:51 PM


  




Thanks Phil, 4200 it is
 
Ted
 

In a message dated 9/7/2010 1:05:38 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
[email protected] writes:
  



Ted,

Silicone RTV caulk is not you best choice. It has low adhesion properties 
therefore it is easy to break the seal and develop a leak. A poly sulfide 
marine caulk is much better adhesion. There are a few good ones out there. 3M 
4200 would be one good choice. 

I like silicone caulk for sealing around thinks like marine speakers or 
instruments that don’t do any work on the boat. It makes servicing or changing 
them in the future much easier. 

I like to use the tooth pick approach whenever bedding deck hardware to help 
mold a true gasket. The gasket needs to be resilient to stand up to the rigors 
of sailing. When a piece of hardware is stressed one side of the gasket will 
often be compressed while the other side stretched. The stretching side is 
where the silicone’s low adhesion lets it fail but any caulk can be ripped 
loose if it is too thin to stretch. Paper thin caulking rips with paper thin 
motion. I look to mold a 1/16” thick gasket by cutting round tooth picks in 
half as spacers so you can loosely assemble the hardware onto the wet caulk 
without squeezing it too thin. Once the caulking is set you remove the tooth 
picks, tighten the hardware, and touch up as required. 

It strikes me applying a 1/16” bead around the each hole on the teak hand rail 
and allowing that to dry completely before doing a loose assembly with wet 
caulking to form the full size gasket could accomplish the same thing. Bring 
some toothpicks just in case the hand rail needs to be sprung in place, as it 
might crush the 1/16th bead at the first point on contact.

One word of caution - 3M5200 (a marine wooden boat adhesive) should be avoided 
on a fiberglass boat. It will be next to impossible to remove the teak in the 
future without breaking the teak or ripping up gel coat if 3M5200 is used.


Phil Agur 
Capitol City N-Trak - All DCC - Sacramento, CA
Mid Century N- California - SP, WP, SF, UP, TWS, and others. 
http://www.capitolcityntrak.org/
http://www.cuttergraphics.com/N-trak/ 



From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, September 07, 2010 7:42 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [IC27A] (no subject)

  




Hello all, I have removed the teak hand rails to refinish then. When re 
installing, I was going to use clear silicone to re bed them. What is the best 
technique to use? I could apply the silicone and replace the rail when the 
silicone is still wet or is it best to let a ring of silicone dry on the hull 
around the screw hole and then place the rail after it completely dry. Any 
suggestions would be appreciated.



Ted Pinelli











      

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