CarFanatic
Fiberglassing Newb
- Location
- Cincinnati, OH
ah, I Thought maybe they were built differently, mabe reinforced so there wasnt foam in them, and had drain plugs.
ah, I Thought maybe they were built differently, mabe reinforced so there wasnt foam in them, and had drain plugs.
I was thinking, like on my seadoo, they have styrafoam wedge around the sides between the top and botom halfs. Wonder why they dont do that on the stand ups? Or something simlar. That would allow water to drain into the hull and then out the back if there were drain plugs.
The hull would be way too weak without foam, from an engineering stand point.
Mark44
It is hard to keep something completeley sealed when there are so many opertunities for water to enter.
Cooling lines in most cases 4 places
stock bilge line 2 places
steering cable 2 places
exhaust 2 places
intermediate one large place
driveshaft tube 2 places
Bond line could be a huge intake.
inserts for pump bolts 4 places
ride plate bolts 4 places or 6 places on a SN
intake 4 bolt holes
How in the world can you not expect water intrution and YES even on an aftermarket hull. Seems no way arround it??????????????????
Yep my thoughts exactly the hull manufacturers I mean aftermarket manufacturers need to do a little more engineering or hire an engineer to do it for them so these nice hulls can get drains in them. :biggthumpup:
Mark44
Really the only way is heavy reinforcement and a closed sell foam (like whats in the nose) molded to fit would work. I gotta believe it will be very expensive to have the molded foam pieces made and it would limmit options on where you run scuppers, waterlines, exhaust and so forth to do it that way. I think unless you got lots of extra $$$$$$$$$$$$$$ your stuck w/ pour in foam option. I wich there were another way as I am at that point now with the REV build.
If your going to use foam then usopen celle foam. Everybody knows that closed cell foam holds water and it does get waterlogged. Every ski gets water in it just getting the water out is the problem. 2 minutes of daining or 4 to 6 hours of completely defoaming.
Water runs right through the Great Stuff foam. Just fill it with that and install drains.
I will be running without foam untill I see my first stress crack then I will reinforce and greatstuff it.
Not at all, I was able to use the pour in foam method and allow for channels horizontally and vertically under hull penetrations to channel any moisture to the rear drains it just takes a little though and planning. Think about it:biggthumpup:
Mark44
If your going to use foam then use open cell foam. Everybody knows that closed cell foam holds water and it does get waterlogged. Every ski gets water in it just getting the water out is the problem. 2 minutes of daining or 4 to 6 hours of completely defoaming.
Water runs right through the Great Stuff foam. Just fill it with that and install drains.
I will be running without foam untill I see my first stress crack then I will reinforce and greatstuff it.
If your going to use foam then use open cell foam. Everybody knows that closed cell foam holds water and it does get waterlogged. Every ski gets water in it just getting the water out is the problem. 2 minutes of daining or 4 to 6 hours of completely defoaming.
Water runs right through the Great Stuff foam. Just fill it with that and install drains.
I will be running without foam untill I see my first stress crack then I will reinforce and greatstuff it.
Or McMaster has balls that go in tanks you can foam over them.
Mark44
i was thinking no foam..