Below the water line should a thru hull come loose, needless to say the boat will sink once the battery is drained down to a point the bilge point no longers work. Why? I have seen 4200, butyl rubber, silicon and other good compounds but they are not permanent.
Neither is 5200 "permanent". I think everyone on this forum has had a 5200 failure and is why so many folks hate it. When, not "if" it leaks it is a PITA to remove. I have even had to rebed a failed keel hull joint originally done with 5200. Still stuck like it was welded in many places but not in the area of failure. Would have been a LOT easier and saved an entire day and a half of labor had it been done with a polysulfide or low adhesion PU.
I have helped many times over the years to bring up boats from the bonnie blue and one reason was due to a loose thru hull leaking below the water line due to jariring from inside i.e. loose heavy gear or being hit from underneath. Not once in over 30 years did I have that issue with any thru hulls embedded with 5200.
Sadly 5200 in this application is a Band-Aid to a seacock that potentially never met industry standards to begin with. 3M 5200 is a Rube Goldberg fix for a Rub Goldberg installation. 3M 5200 on a seacock is like using Fix-A-Flat to "fix" a flat tire. It's not a fix it's just a Band-Aid attempting to hide a problem not fixed correctly.
With "proper" seacocks a polysulfide works tremendously well even at just 130 PSI bond strength. Never once had one leak, ever. I have many customers with Cape Dory boats and "proper" seacocks bedded with polysulfide going on 30+ years. I am currently working on a mid 80's Ericson with Marelon that was bedded with polysulfide. No leaks even though it's an improper installation.
I applied liberally and once installedl, cleaned up all the excess either using acetone or alchol and allowing to dry for 7 days. I hope this explains my reasoning for 5200 as it needs to be permanent.
Alcohol should not be used on 5200 for prep or clean up! Toulene or Acetone are fine.
From 3M:
Limitations -
- Alcohol should not be used in preparation for bonding as it will stop the curing process, causing the adhesive to fail..
Note that this is one of the only red ink warnings on the 3M 5200 TDS....
With an in-line valve slapped on a thru-hull, which does not meet ABYC standards in most sizes, 5200 can be a decent option but it is still in no way "permanent". 4200 can also be a good option. 5200 can be a pain in the arse to remove and because no seacocks is ever a "permanent" installation I generally prefer a product like 4200.. I would suggest that if you need more than the 300 PSI bond strength of 4200 then something is terribly wrong with the installation. Silicone should not be used below water..
As for removal, there is a debonder as previously mentioned but never used it. I simply took a fine putty knife to cut the seal with and never had issues.
crazy dave condon
De-Bond works but is very time consuming. When 5200 has been used a 4" angle grinder usually works to grind the external head off. For flush mounted thru-hulls some heat and a pipe wrench can break it free. The real pita is getting the internal nut off if someone got 5200 on it..
The bottom line is that if you "need" 5200 then the seacock is not a proper installation and some consideration should be given to doing the job the right way. A seacock installed properly can use the lowest adhesion polyurethane or polysulfide and can still last for 20 or more years. When you take it apart in the future the pars can often be re-used where with 5200 the parts are very often destroyed.
Watched a boat yard last spring ruin some ports on a Niagara 35. The 3M 5200 failed, as in NOT PERMANENT, and most of the ports had to be destroyed to remove them. A week with De-Bond, and over $100.00 spent on the product was of no help for the eight+ ports. the yard tried to salvage the ports but at some point the labor becomes more expensive than the product you are attempting to save. Because 3M 5200 was used it cost the over $2200.00 in new port lights instead of cleaning and re-installing the used ones plus all the added labor in removal. There are 1000's of stories like this that involve 5200....:neutral: