Decking - Soft Spots - How to repair

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Nick R

Looking at Hunter with about 3 sg. ft. soft spot on the deck, in front on the turn buckle. How difficult is this to repair? Should I stay away from this Boat?
 
K

KF

Drill

Just drill holes in the area and fill with epoxy. Or pay the marina $3000 to strip the area dn relay the deck area.
 
Dec 2, 1999
15,184
Hunter Vision-36 Rio Vista, CA.
If you like it buy it.

Nick: Make this a condition of the sale. Either the seller fixes it or have a yard give you a fixed estimate for the repair and deduct that from the purchase price. If they do not want to do this, there is another boat out there waiting for you. Was this problem discovered by a surveyor? If you have not had a survey you should. You need one for the insurance company so you may as well get one if you are going to purchase it anyway.
 
J

Jack

Why soft?

If the core is wet then I would not recommend drilling and injecting. If the core is dry then that will work if you don't mind the cosmetic blemish. By the way, after you have injected epoxy there will be a sag in each hole after the epoxy drys. Use A colored gel coat to fix or Marinetex. Coloring the epoxy doesn't work since it eventually yellows. First hand experience. It is not that hard to cut away that much deck. Can usually be done with a circular saw set very low. Replacing the coring, glassing etc is not all that difficult. Try and not to cut on the non-skid and you can get a pretty good repair. Of course you need to find the leak that started the whole problem in the first place. If the boat is in otherwise good condition and the price reflects the problem it may be a good deal. An older boat is going to have some issues so if it is 10 years or older I would take that into consideration. As advised in an earlier post, check with your surveyor. You may be able to get the whole deck painted if you work it right. Good luck.
 
D

Doug T.

Deck repair

If you find that the core material is wet and you decide to remove the top layer of fiberglass, the circular saw is hard to use. It's big, bulky and hard to control -- especially in tight quarters or around curves. Instead, you could use a Dremel with a cutting blade to cut off the top layer of deck material.
 
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