Monday, August 29, 2011

Post 4 - Removing the Rubrail




This last weekend, I finished removing the old rubrail on the sailboat. As you can see from this first picture, the rubrail is screwed from the outside through the hull of the boat. The screw is attached through the joint between the two halves of the boat, and then the nut on the inside of the boat is covered in fiberglass tape.

In this first picture , you can see the seam between the white bottom hull piece and the blue top deck piece, which overlaps it. These two pieces are screwed together from the outside.
After the two pieces were screwed together, the rubrail was screwed through both pieces from the outside. This effectively covers the seam on the outside of the boat. After the rubrail was screwed on, the inside seam and all the exposed screws and nuts were then taped over with fiberglass. This makes removing the rubrail a little more difficult.


In the second picture, you can see the inside taped seam, and the bulges in the seam where all the scews and nuts have been taped over. The darker holes you can see are where I have already chiseled through the fiberglass and removed the rubrail screws. The remaining bumps are the screws that attach the deck to the hull.
Even after I chiseled the fiberglass out of the way on the inside, the screws were usually too corroded to turn without stripping-out. As a result, I ended up chiseling the rubrail out of the way of the screwhead, as seen in the third picture.







I then cut off the outside screwheads with a
cutoff disk attached to my dremel tool. After the screwheads were cut off, I was able to remove the rubrail .With the rubrail removed, and the tape removed from the inside, I was then able to drive the screws out with a punch from the outside of the boat. I will be filling all these holes in with epoxy, and then I will drill new holes for the new rubrail after I have painted the outside of the boat.
In other news, I purchased a gallon of Franmar Soy Strip to aid with the paint removal. I tested it on a section of the deck by applying it about 1/8" thick and then covering it with waxed paper. After two hours, I removed the waxed paper and I was able to easily scrape the top layer of paint off. There are two layers of paint that I want to remove, so next time I will try leaving the solution on for a longer period of time before I try scraping.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Post 3 - In the Garage and Scraping Paint


The boat now sits comfortably in the garage. Much of the past few weeks was spent simply organizing the garage, so I would actually have room to work. After multiple trips to the dump and storage, the work has resumed.

Much of the boat hardware has been removed. Paint has been scraped off about half of the starboard hull. Not much at all has been scraped off the topside. For now, I am using a 2" carbide scraper. No chemicals as of yet. I will soon be ordering some, though.