Bedding Deck Hardware With Bed-It Butyl Tape

Jun 3, 2004
25
- - Annapolis
Possible cleaner for silicone

Came across your tutorial (great by the way) because I was looking for a way to remove and rebed the fixed ports in my H 356 that are set in polysulfide. During that search I came across PolyGone305 by RPM Technology. Tech support claims it will remove silicone and polysulifde without mechanical scrapping and that it will not damage fiberglass. It will, however, craze lexan and plexiglass.

I haven't tried it yet, but it may be the answer to your request for a product that will remove silicone from gelcoat.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,665
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
Came across your tutorial (great by the way) because I was looking for a way to remove and rebed the fixed ports in my H 356 that are set in polysulfide. During that search I came across PolyGone305 by RPM Technology. Tech support claims it will remove silicone and polysulifde without mechanical scrapping and that it will not damage fiberglass. It will, however, craze lexan and plexiglass.

I haven't tried it yet, but it may be the answer to your request for a product that will remove silicone from gelcoat.

Tested it, fails to remove silicone contamination on gelcoat..
 
Nov 26, 2008
1,966
Endeavour 42 Cruisin
Will be rebedding both 8' long, curved genoa tracks soon. The tracks are flat SS held up off the deck by a plastic spacer. We'll be replacing the spacer with 3/8" starboard.

Do I need to butyl the entire length of the track, both sides of the starboard? Or can I just seal everything at each bolt hole? Or something else entirely??
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,665
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
Will be rebedding both 8' long, curved genoa tracks soon. The tracks are flat SS held up off the deck by a plastic spacer. We'll be replacing the spacer with 3/8" starboard.

Do I need to butyl the entire length of the track, both sides of the starboard? Or can I just seal everything at each bolt hole? Or something else entirely??
I would not use Starboard. Nothing likes to stick to it. Butyl is likely the best option with Starboard, as it seals in compression, but still it is like trying to seal a Teflon frying pan.

I would use G10 or another piece of SS narrower and full length of the track drilled to match the top piece. Alternatively, and perhaps the best option, is to purchase some actual genny track which has a concave bottom specifically to help keep it sealed. I think Garhauer has some good prices on G track, that is IF the hole patterns line up....

Always fun when a builder or PO takes a non-standard & less than ideal approach....;)
 
May 28, 2009
764
Hunter 376 Pensacola, FL
An Ode To Butyl Rubber

I became a convert several years ago. Here's my latest experience (with a plug for Maine Sail's Bed-It Tape). Read the post on my blog if you want to see the pictures, there are just too many to load into this forum.

http://www.lifeonthehook.com/2015/05/14/an-ode-to-butyl-rubber/

Here's just the text if you don't need to see the pictures:

I like to think I'm pretty handy around the boat. Yank an engine and replace the motor mounts? Done it. Knock out a bulkhead and build a new one to replace it? Not a problem. Pull the shaft, install a new shaft seal, and lap the prop? Piece of cake. Install all new electronics and successfully network them together? Got that T shirt. I almost always leave things I work on in better shape than they were before I started, which is the true measure of success for any boat project. But there is one task for which I have virtually no talent. A chore I truly dread tackling. An important maintenance skill which I am hopelessly inept at.

I cannot use a caulking gun to save my life.

Oh sure, I can squeeze the trigger and make the stuff ooze out of the tube. But when I pull the nozzle along the surface where I want to lay a bead, the caulk drags and balls up. When I push the nozzle along the surface, thinking the tip of the tube will feather the flowing caulk, it builds up like a freshly plowed furrow. I attempt to use a moistened finger to smooth the bead, and it gets all over my hands. And then the caulking gun. And then everything around me. By the time I'm done, I have a stalactite of caulk hanging from my nose where I absentmindedly pushed my glasses back onto my face, my shirt is a total loss, because you just can't wash the stuff out of clothing, and I've used a least a quart of alcohol and a half a roll of paper towels trying to get the stuff off everything it's not supposed to be on.

I've made peace with my shortcoming. It's one I can live with. I was resigned to having to allow an hour for cleanup after any five minute caulking job. But then I met my saviour. It is a miracle of modern science called butyl rubber. And since I discovered it, I have left my caulking gun behind and have never looked back.

One of the projects on our to-do list was to replace two hatches just forward of our mast. They both dripped from the hinges a bit when it rained, and the frame on the port one was warped just enough that you could see daylight past the seal, which means it leaked in anything more than a light drizzle. Having to put bowls under the hatches to catch drips whenever it rains just felt too much like living in a shanty for our taste. We considered trying to repair them in place, but I really wanted to replace them with heavier models. Hunter Marine used Lewmar Low Profile hatches, which are pretty light duty for hatches that tend to get walked on a lot since they're so close to the mast (not by us but by every rigger and canvas guy that steps onboard. They just don't seem to care). As part of our big Defender order during this year's Annual Warehouse Sale, we bought two new Medium Profile hatches to replace the leaky ones. They have 1/2" thick acrylic lenses instead of the 5/16" acrylic on the old ones, and will stand up much better to abuse.

Normally, installing a new hatch would mean the use of caulk. Lots and lots of caulk. Some Boatlife or polysulfide, or the dreaded silicon, or God forbid maybe even some 3M 4200. I have no sympathy for anyone foolish enough to reach for a tube of 3M 5200. They get what they deserve because they brought it on themselves. There's a reason they call it Satan's Glue.

Anyway, the weather called for several days of dry, which was perfect hatch replacing weather. So, out came the old hatches.

Now I'll be honest here. I'm a handy guy, but I value my time. While I cut the old caulk from below with my oscillating saw and removed the mounting screws to help the process along, I called our friends at Troendle Marine to yank the old hatches. They sent one of their crack marine mechanics over, who had them both out in under an hour. Money well spent in my opinion, as I would have sweated and cursed my way through the job for an entire afternoon, and let's face it, I had blog posts to write.

So after scraping off all the old caulk and cleaning up the holes to accept the new hatches, I dropped them in place for a test fit. Even though they were the same brand (Lewmar) and size (size 40) as the old ones, the mounting holes were in different locations (naturally. This is a boat job we're talking about after all). So I shot some epoxy into the old holes and a little more into a low spot where Hunter hadn't faired out the surface properly at the factory, and waited for it to cure.

Interestingly enough, the easiest way to do this was with a tube of West Marine Six10 self-mixing epoxy adhesive, which is actually applied with, yes, a caulking gun. But since it is epoxy and not caulk, it is not inherently evil, and thus easy to use and achieve good results.

See the difference? I mean, it's so obvious, right?

So while waiting for the epoxy to set up, I started preparing the new hatches. The butyl rubber I use is called Bed-It Tape and comes in a 1/2" by 50 foot roll. It's sort of like a long gray ribbon of chewing gum.

So I layed a nice bead of it all the way around the hatch flanges, working it up into a slight mound as I went.

One of Bed-It Tapes many outstanding features is that it never hardens. It has the consistency of well-chewed gum today, and it will have the consistency of well-chewed gum 20 years from now. So unlike caulk, once you get started, it's no problem if you want to take a break. Go ahead, make a sandwich, get some iced tea, it will still be nice and gummy when you get back. Phone's ringing? Answer it. This stuff isn't going anywhere. It's not going to harden in your absence.

When I was finished gumming up the hatch flanges, my fingers were clean, my shirt was clean, my nose was clean, and there were no silicon skid marks all over the deck from accidentally tracking caulk around. It took 15 or 20 minutes a hatch to build up the Bed-It Butyl Tape the way I wanted, rather that 5 minutes or so to coat it in a thick goop of caulk, but I was way, way ahead on cleanup time, so I'm fine with it.

I had already drilled the new mounting holes and had used my bevel bit on them (more on this in a moment). So I pushed each hatch into place and installed the mounting screws, working my way around the frame, tightening each screw in turn. After a few minutes, I gave them each another partial turn. At that point it looked like this:

A nice bead of Bed-It butyl had squeezed out from under the hatch flange. Trace around the flange with a sharp knife, use your fingers to peel off the extra butyl, and done!. Nothing left but to stand back and admire your work.

Well, not quite. I wanted to finish the entire job while I was up there in the hot sun. Our boat's original owner had had some nice sunbrella hatch covers made. Unfortunately, he mounted them with button snaps screwed to the deck, which has got to be the worst way possible to do such a thing.

Why a bad idea? Well, most decks have a plywood or balsa core sandwiched between an upper and lower layer of fiberglass. The plywood or balsa is there to give the deck stiffness. Fiberglass alone would result in the deck being something like a swimming pool springboard. Drill lots and lots of tiny holes in the deck and fail to seal them properly, and it gives water a way to leak into the plywood core. Which will then turn to mush. And then your deck is a bounce house in the sun. Oh, and if you do it this way, you also can' t open the hatch when the cover is snapped down. There are probably some other reasons as well, but those will suffice to qualify it as a bad idea.

I had a sneaking suspicion those button snaps weren't sealed properly. I removed one to check. Damn I hate being right all the time. But you can hardly ever be wrong if you just assume the last guy didn't take the time to do it right. Whoever had installed those snaps (I'm going with the canvas guy who made the hatch covers) hadn't bothered to put so much as a drop of silicon under them. They needed to be sealed. Fortunately, I just happened to have a nice golf ball-sized glob of butyl rubber made up of the excess that oozed out of the hatch flanges. So I took my bevel bit in my cordless drill and beveled each of the holes.

It only took a few seconds per hole, but hey, time is money, so I guess it's too much to have expected whoever installed these to take the time orginally. I had beveled the screw holes for the new hatches the same way. By doing this, the butyl rubber compacts down into a nice tight gasket when you tighten the fastener.

So I then tore off small gobs of Bed-It from my ball of leftovers and stuck it in the holes. Remember, it's not caulk. It's uber bedding. It's still nice and gummy and ready to go to work.

Screw the button snaps back down, and it compresses the butyl into a nice tight seal, with the excess squeezing out around the snaps.

You don't even bother scoring this with a knife. Just pinch the excess with your fingernails and peel it off. The Bed-It butyl that got compressed into the beveled hole isn't coming out.

Throw the leftover roll of Bed-It butyl rubber in a ziplock and toss it in a locker, and it will be there waiting for you whenever you again need to bed a hatch, port or fitting. And if you screw it up and it leaks, it's no big deal to just pop the hatch or fitting back out, add some additional butyl, and try again. It never cures. so you don't have to scrape off the old stuff in order to add new, unless it's gotten contaminated by dirt or grime. Have a few bits stuck in the non-skid that you can't get off? Take a small ball of Bed-It butyl and use it like silly putty to pull up the loose bits. Or a dab of mineral spirits on a rag will take it right off.

So if you're saying to yourself, "Thanks Robert, I hate caulk even more than you and that stuff looks amazing, tell me more and where do I get some?" then here's a link where you can learn more about this modern day miracle and purchase some for yourself:

http://www.pbase.com/mainecruising/rebedding_hardware

So do yourself a favor and just say no to caulk. You won't regret Bed-It, I promise!
 
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May 16, 2015
1
Frers Dawn 48 Hampton
I am a believer

I discovered butyl sealant years ago when I was given a length of black butyl auto windshield tape to re-attach the glass of a rear view mirror that had come lose.

I had been using the auto tape to re-bed my stanchions to my teak deck. Happy -- Google brought me to this wealth of information and and a source for marine grade buytal tape and a color that I can use for re-bedding on my fiberglass cabin.

My question/problem ---- I have 4 large glass panes on the side of my cabin that were bedded with a 'devils glue' product that leak! My best efforts haven't budged them so I have dug out the caulk between the glass and the fiberglass on the out side to the cabin leaving a 1/8 inch wide 3/8 deep gap to fill with new sealant.

I have purchased a pint of

("CRL Windshield and Repair Butyl Sealant" CRL Professional Windshield and Repair Sealants are a flow grade liquid rubber polymer compound for auto glass installations and repair work. It remains elastic, adheres well to glass, metal and rubber surfaces and sets up as a permanent, flexible sealant. Apply with screw-on-adhesive applicator 181AG or by brush to fill any openings such as around clips in corners, or around setting blocks and back filling operations on new gaskets.)

I had planed to pour - work it into the gap I had created. My question is --- IS THIS THE BEST APPROACH? or what other products/approaches might I try? If this seems like a good approach --- should I epoxy the surface of the fiberglass that got roughened during the removal of the devils glue? or leave it rough?.

I need something that will penetrate into the small 1/8 inch gap and stick to both the glass and fiberglass. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks Jon
 

Kestle

.
Jun 12, 2011
702
MacGregor 25 San Pedro
I became a convert several years ago. Here's my latest experience (with a plug for Maine Sail). Read the post on my blog if you want to see the pictures, there are just too many to load into this forum. http://www.lifeonthehook.com/2015/05/14/an-ode-to-butyl-rubber/ !
Uhm...grammar check:

"Thanks Robert, I hate caulk even more than you...":

I think you meant "I hate caulk even more than you DO...

(File under "Let's eat Grandma!" vs. Let's eat, Grandma!)

:) Jeff
 

AaronD

.
Aug 10, 2014
723
Catalina 22 9874 Newberg, OR / Olympia, WA
Butyl tape for outboard bracket?

Maine,

Would you recommend Bed-It butyl tape for bedding an outboard motor bracket on the transom? Or is it better to go to Sikaflex or one of the sealers you recommend below the waterline?

When floating level, the bracket is of course above the waterline, but when heeled, the bottom bolts might be submerged - so it seemed like a bit of a corner-case, and the answer wasn't obvious to me (I have your butyl tape, Sikaflex 291, and 4200 all on hand, and I can't choose between them :). I'd certainly prefer Bed-It butyl, as it's easy to work with and easy to disassemble if I ever should need to. But I want to be sure it's appropriate for this case. Thanks.
 
Feb 6, 1998
11,665
Canadian Sailcraft 36T Casco Bay, ME
Maine,

Would you recommend butyl tape for bedding an outboard motor bracket on the transom? Or is it better to go to Sikaflex or one of the sealers you recommend below the waterline?

When floating level, the bracket is of course above the waterline, but when heeled, the bottom bolts might be submerged - so it seemed like a bit of a corner-case, and the answer wasn't obvious to me (I have your butyl tape, Sikaflex 291, and 4200 all on hand, and I can't choose between them :). I'd certainly prefer butyl, as it's easy to work with and easy to disassemble if I ever should need to. But I want to be sure it's appropriate for this case. Thanks.
For that application you could really use any of them. Pick which one you prefer and enjoy the boat!
 

AaronD

.
Aug 10, 2014
723
Catalina 22 9874 Newberg, OR / Olympia, WA
Re: Butyl tape for outboard bracket?

Thanks. Bed-It Butyl tape it is. :)

For that application you could really use any of them. Pick which one you prefer and enjoy the boat!
 
Jan 7, 2018
13
Gulfstar 43' Mark II CC Ketch Port Everglades, Florida
I know this is a really old post, but I thought I'd ask here anyway...

I noticed that you do not have any examples of using Butyl with screws that do not utilize a backing nut.

I am replacing teak trim boards which are screwed on and plugged. I have heard that if you turn the screw and twist it through the butyl it will leave a channel for water to penetrate... Is that correct, or is there a way to use butyl tape to seal the mounting holes for the screws holding my teak trim to the surround of my cockpit?

Thanks!
 
Jan 7, 2018
13
Gulfstar 43' Mark II CC Ketch Port Everglades, Florida
Justsomeguy,

There is a big difference between a bolt which "spins slightly" and a rough thread screw which is rotated 30 or 40 times as it is driven into the substrate. It is impossible to "minimize" a screw from twisting while it is being driven...

For clarification, the post only refers to machine screws. A machine screw is actually a type of Bolt (using a nut to keep it secured in place) which can be turned with a screwdriver, rather than a more traditional sheet metal or wood screw (which relies on it's threads alone to hold the substrate.)

Hence my question. :)
 
Nov 14, 2013
200
Catalina 50 Seattle
I've had good luck wrapping a ring of butyl around, but not touching, the screw. If you combine that with a good countersink of the screw hole at the bedding interface (i.e. in the fiberglass under the teak), the butyl will flow into the threads when tightened. It takes a bit of practice because you don't want to use so much butyl that you have to do a lot of re-tightening because that'll break the seal each time. However, I find that the butyl does reliably flow back into the threads. The key is to roughly match the volume of the countersink to the volume of the butyl ring.
 
Feb 20, 2011
7,990
Island Packet 35 Tucson, AZ/San Carlos, MX
Hence my question. :)
Then you do your best to goop under the head of the screw as it bottoms out onto your deck or hardware, and butyl may not be the best choice for such an application.

Yes, I'm an iconoclastic blasphemer. :biggrin:
 
Nov 14, 2013
200
Catalina 50 Seattle
I've had good luck wrapping a ring of butyl around, but not touching, the screw. If you combine that with a good countersink of the screw hole at the bedding interface (i.e. in the fiberglass under the teak), the butyl will flow into the threads when tightened. It takes a bit of practice because you don't want to use so much butyl that you have to do a lot of re-tightening because that'll break the seal each time. However, I find that the butyl does reliably flow back into the threads. The key is to roughly match the volume of the countersink to the volume of the butyl ring.
Just to clarify, I meant wrapping the ring of butyl around the screw on the underside of the part being fastened, not at the head of the fastener.