Honestly, the longer I own Journeyman (10 years now) the more I see how very carefully designed she is. I make all significant alterations only after I think I thoroughly understand the system or structure I am going to alter . . . and then I often decide to leave the boat alone. That drain plug is a beefy, damage resistant fitting, and especially if blobbed over with some 5200 or whatever (probably overkill) it is not going to make any trouble.
BTW, I wrap a bit of Teflon plumbing tape around the threads when I reinstall my plug each spring, works great at sealing it.Nicholas H. Walsh P.A.
111 Commercial St.
Portland ME 04101
207/772-2191
Fax 207/774-3940
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From: TristanV
Sent: Monday, April 04, 2011 11:43 AM
To:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [AlbinVega] Re: Glassing the drain plug
Umm, take a look at some boats in a marina in the north counry where it freezes in winter. Your boat is a 1975 model and stored inside for ten years, and so far it has never suffered "sinking on the hard" - that what happens to boats left on the hard that collect rain water due to a few years of neglect and collection of rain water into the bilge and gradually overflowing into the cabin - because it can't get out.
Personally, I think Albin was brilliant to put in a drain plug in the bilge - all plastic boats should have them. It helps to look at the long view - as in decades, instead of seasons and what effects there are from unintentional happenings - leaking IN instead of OUT.
Respectfully,
tv