starcrafttom
Active member
I'll take a look at it next weekend after I watch the Seahawks destroy the Falcons.
How was that again????
I'll take a look at it next weekend after I watch the Seahawks destroy the Falcons.
mgarr682":2s593eia said:...I noticed a single drop of water fall from the bolt head on the port end of the ceiling shelf. Yup. A leak.... The bolt takes a very large phillips screwdriver, larger than anything I've got. Looks like an excuse for a trip to the tool store.
Captains Cat":1dlun84h said:If you've got SS handrails topside, that may be one of the bolts that goes all the way through to hold it on.
Charlie
mgarr682":mitzjzif said:Looks like some pretty good fishing in that parking lot. I many have to take a fishing pole along tomorrow. I ran out of cable ties before getting all the wires routed so that will be the next step, along with a whopper phillips head screw driver.
breausaw":9ufbvb1n said:mgarr682":9ufbvb1n said:Looks like some pretty good fishing in that parking lot. I many have to take a fishing pole along tomorrow..
At over 31 feet the water is a little deep in the parking lot also. :wink
Sunbeam":nhjo09xe said:Enjoying watching you outfit your new boat :thup
It's fun to note the slight differences in various boats. On my 22 Cruiser they used a different solution for the handrail/shelf fasteners:
...
The same fasteners/washers are used on the inside of the small grabrails that are in the cockpit on the after side of the cabin house.
Sunbeam":nhjo09xe said:Side note: It looks like you know your way around a boat, so it's not like you need advice -- but just for the sake of discussion: I see what looks like some bedding compound on the inside of the fasteners (presumably from the builder). I don't like to bed things on the underside, as I go by the theory that if the outside bedding is failing/leaking, I *want* the leak to come on through to the cabin so I know about it and can deal with it - rather than the initial stages of the leak just "stewing" on the fasteners and in the cavity and not coming on through.
rogerbum":25mxhwcn said:mgarr,
It's pretty easy to cut the bolts down to a decent length and best of all, it provides another opportunity to buy a new tool. It looks like those bolts are 1/4-20 but I could be wrong on that. Also, it looks like the phillips head on the one is closed to stripped, so you might want to replace it anyway. Regardless, the easiest way I have found to cut a bolt down is to:
1) Measure/determine the desire length and mark that with a sharpie.
2) Screw and appropriate size (e.g. 1/4-20 if that's the correct thread size) die (*bonus - a tool purchase) until it is below the area you will cut.
3) Using a cutoff wheel (*bonus - a tool purchase) on a dremel tool (*bonus - a tool purchase), cut off the bolt
4) Using a small grinding wheel (*bonus - a tool purchase) in the dremel, round off the end of the cut.
5) Take the dye back off - this will clean up the threads on the end of the bolt.
This is fast and easy and produces bolts of the correct length.
Chris":2u9s3r2n said:On my boat the shorter screw is for the forward hole...shorter to accommodate the radius in the rail above. The longer screw in the forward position will bottom out on the rail.
Fixed a typing error.rogerbum":3d45v206 said:<stuff clipped> I mounted them on some 3/4" thick red oak that I stained with a red walnut stain. This approximates the color of teak. <stuff clipped>