Jump to content

Leaky Aluminum


hunterjoe84

Recommended Posts

Thanks GWB, Shore Lunch and Wormdunker. I will mark all major leaks, then jb weld all the major leaks, and finally use the rubberized paint to finish it off. Once again thank you very much. I picked up a boat, motor and trailer for 380. It is my first boat and I am sure everyone has a story about their first boat. It is a 16 ft with a 9.2. she doesn't go fast but its better than padding!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I forgot to give further instructions. Make sure u roughen up the rivet areas with a wire brush to give the JB weld a rough surface to bond. I used my 1/2" electric drill with a stiff wire brush attachment to remove old paint, & roughen up the aluminum a bit. Allow the JB weld to cure overnight. Good luck

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mark the rivots that are leaking,drill them out and one or two extra on each side,rough up the alum,add sealant and rerivot with waterproof alum rivots.If the rivots are loose,then go with a rivot thats 1/16 bigger.

Buck rivoting is the best option IMO,most people dont have the tools for it,or the know how!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Before you go plastering your boat with JB weld, and sealant, you should try tightening the leaky rivets.

 

I had an old aluminum that leaked like a sive. Me and a budy thightened all of the rivets. There where a few that couldn't be tightened, so I marked them, and sealed with 3M 5200 marine adhesive sealant. I've used JB weld in the past, and it ended up cracking on me, and the leak came back. 3M 5200 will not crack, it takes a long time to cure, and remains flexable once cured.

 

To tighten the rivets, I used an pneumatic air hammar on one side, and a heavy sledge hammer head on the other side. Just a few hits with the air hammar, and they tighten right up. It took about an 1-1/2 hour to do the entire boat.

 

Doesn't leak a singe drop now.

Edited by F-is-H
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Before you go plastering your boat with JB weld, and sealant, you should try tightening the leaky rivets.

 

I had an old aluminum that leaked like a sive. Me and a budy thightened all of the rivets. There where a few that couldn't be tightened, so I marked them, and sealed with 3M 5200 marine adhesive sealant. I've used JB weld in the past, and it ended up cracking on me, and the leak came back. 3M 5200 will not crack, it takes a long time to cure, and remains flexable once cured.

 

To tighten the rivets, I used an pneumatic air hammar on one side, and a heavy sledge hammer head on the other side. Just a few hits with the air hammar, and they tighten right up. It took about an 1-1/2 hour to do the entire boat.

 

Doesn't leak a singe drop now.

 

As I mentioned,Buck rivoting!

What you mention will work, definitely!Except that no one knows if its been done already!

Best to drill the heads off and knock them out and use new rivots and a touch of sealant!

Yes you need an air hammer with proper attachments and a good peice of heavy steel,with a good flat edge!And some ear plugs!

I dread that type of work!Noise wise!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Before you go plastering your boat with JB weld, and sealant, you should try tightening the leaky rivets.

 

I had an old aluminum that leaked like a sive. Me and a budy thightened all of the rivets. There where a few that couldn't be tightened, so I marked them, and sealed with 3M 5200 marine adhesive sealant. I've used JB weld in the past, and it ended up cracking on me, and the leak came back. 3M 5200 will not crack, it takes a long time to cure, and remains flexable once cured.

 

To tighten the rivets, I used an pneumatic air hammar on one side, and a heavy sledge hammer head on the other side. Just a few hits with the air hammar, and they tighten right up. It took about an 1-1/2 hour to do the entire boat.

 

Doesn't leak a singe drop now.

 

 

:thumbsup_anim:

:good:

 

Bang on the $$$$........ Do it once do it right....

While you're there a slather of any of the above mentioned products over the exposed rivets wouldn't hurt either.....

"GOOP Marine" works wonders as well.

 

Randy

:canadian:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Before you go plastering your boat with JB weld, and sealant, you should try tightening the leaky rivets.

 

I had an old aluminum that leaked like a sive. Me and a budy thightened all of the rivets. There where a few that couldn't be tightened, so I marked them, and sealed with 3M 5200 marine adhesive sealant. I've used JB weld in the past, and it ended up cracking on me, and the leak came back. 3M 5200 will not crack, it takes a long time to cure, and remains flexable once cured.

 

To tighten the rivets, I used an pneumatic air hammar on one side, and a heavy sledge hammer head on the other side. Just a few hits with the air hammar, and they tighten right up. It took about an 1-1/2 hour to do the entire boat.

 

Doesn't leak a singe drop now.

 

 

Does a good looking blonde come with the air hammer?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recent Topics

    Popular Topics

    Upcoming Events


×
×
  • Create New...