assateague wrote:After you get it stripped out, put it on some horses and put water in it. See if it leaks first. I'm a firm believer in the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it and if it is broke, it already ain't working so fix it yourself. To hell with paying somebody for something you can do yourself" philosophy.
your better off to put it in the water and load it down and look for leaks. Waters heavy as shit and too much on saw horses can cause issueskalmic wrote:OK sounds like a good idea. This may seem like a dumb question but I have never done it. How do I prop the boat up on saw horses and fill it with water without damaging the boat?
jehler wrote:your better off to put it in the water and load it down and look for leaks. Waters heavy as **** and too much on saw horses can cause issueskalmic wrote:OK sounds like a good idea. This may seem like a dumb question but I have never done it. How do I prop the boat up on saw horses and fill it with water without damaging the boat?
if it takes on water putting it on blocks and putting some water in it to find what rivets are leaking works, just don't set the boat up and fill it with 18" of waterkalmic wrote:jehler wrote:your better off to put it in the water and load it down and look for leaks. Waters heavy as **** and too much on saw horses can cause issueskalmic wrote:OK sounds like a good idea. This may seem like a dumb question but I have never done it. How do I prop the boat up on saw horses and fill it with water without damaging the boat?
That sounds a little safer for the boat. I know a place I can definitely do that. Thanks
yep, but before you replace you attempt to fix, I'm sure their is you tubes on it but can be done with a pair of hammers in a pinch, if you can't find anything I'll post up a blow by blow in how tokalmic wrote:What is the best way to fix Aluminum Rivets? And how do you know which ones need replacing? Do you only replace the ones that leak?
Return to Duck Boat & Mud Motor Forum
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 45 guests