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Boat House
When and when not to strip to the bone
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<blockquote data-quote="Bigkat650" data-source="post: 235589" data-attributes="member: 7270"><p>When you are redoing your floors, it is a good time to go in and completely strip down the interior of the boat and seal/protect it. Is it over-kill in some cases? Absolutely. But having the piece of mind that your seams/rivets are completely sealed and sealed correctly is worth its weight in gold.</p><p></p><p>My biggest fear for not resealing would be if after I just did all the work to redo my floors, then my hull developed a leak shortly there-after--I would have to rip out my floors to get to where the leak is to seal it.</p><p></p><p>Added cost is minimal to strip/refinish in the grand scheme of things.</p><p></p><p>Good Luck</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bigkat650, post: 235589, member: 7270"] When you are redoing your floors, it is a good time to go in and completely strip down the interior of the boat and seal/protect it. Is it over-kill in some cases? Absolutely. But having the piece of mind that your seams/rivets are completely sealed and sealed correctly is worth its weight in gold. My biggest fear for not resealing would be if after I just did all the work to redo my floors, then my hull developed a leak shortly there-after--I would have to rip out my floors to get to where the leak is to seal it. Added cost is minimal to strip/refinish in the grand scheme of things. Good Luck [/QUOTE]
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When and when not to strip to the bone
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