I replaced eight glass windows that go on our Yankee Seahorse with Acrylic. The total costs was sixty dollars for the 2 foot by four foot sheet of Acrylic. The original boat windows could not be cleaned because they were two separate pieces of glass sandwiched together and they had fogged internally.
The hardest part of this project was cleaning off the old chalking around the aluminum frames. The stuff had hardened over time and was difficult to remove. We ended up letting the eight window frames soak for a couple of weeks in soapy water to soften the old chalking up so it would come off.
We placed the old glass windows on the 2' by 4' sheet of Acrylic and traced the outlines with a pencil onto the brown paper covering the sheet of Acrylic. We then used a jigsaw to cut around the outlines. Medium speed on the jigsaw using a metal blade worked best. The Acrylic was easy to cut. We then lightly sanded the edges before inserting the Acrylic into the rubber gaskets that fit into the aluminum frame guides.
My question:
Should I use 100% Silicone Clear Chalk when I insert the aluminum frames back into the window slots on the boat? I know Silicone chalk remains flexible and works well for sealing house windows, but will it work well for boat windows? One of the old windows had developed a small leak and we hope to be able to seal all of the replacements well enough so they do not leak in the future. Thank you for your help.
I have attached a few photos. The brown stuff behind the window frame slot is cardboard we used to keep the sanding dust out of the interior cabin.
The hardest part of this project was cleaning off the old chalking around the aluminum frames. The stuff had hardened over time and was difficult to remove. We ended up letting the eight window frames soak for a couple of weeks in soapy water to soften the old chalking up so it would come off.
We placed the old glass windows on the 2' by 4' sheet of Acrylic and traced the outlines with a pencil onto the brown paper covering the sheet of Acrylic. We then used a jigsaw to cut around the outlines. Medium speed on the jigsaw using a metal blade worked best. The Acrylic was easy to cut. We then lightly sanded the edges before inserting the Acrylic into the rubber gaskets that fit into the aluminum frame guides.
My question:
Should I use 100% Silicone Clear Chalk when I insert the aluminum frames back into the window slots on the boat? I know Silicone chalk remains flexible and works well for sealing house windows, but will it work well for boat windows? One of the old windows had developed a small leak and we hope to be able to seal all of the replacements well enough so they do not leak in the future. Thank you for your help.
I have attached a few photos. The brown stuff behind the window frame slot is cardboard we used to keep the sanding dust out of the interior cabin.
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