As a cruiser, you rely heavily on your dinghy as it is your “water car”. The only time you don’t need your dinghy is when you are in a marina.
Our dinghy, “Sweet N Low” or “Sweetie” as she is now referred to, has been in dire need of some lovin. We have needed to work on her for a while, but didn’t have several days in a row where she wasn’t in use.
List of ailments:
- Rub rail was coming off
- Velcro holding chaps was peeling off
- Chaps needed mending (several tears, velcro, patches, and seams)
- Slow leak, somewhere
Dinghy tubes are typically made from two types of materials: PVC or hypalon. We have a hypalon dinghy which requires a specific type glue. Matt found a glue used for escalators, Cement SC 2000 which is a two-step gluing agent that requires several days to cure.
Several chemicals can be used to remove this type of glue. MEK, acetone, and mineral spirits. They are wicked on your skin and have a pungent odor. Several videos show you how to remove the glue as well, but they require tools that we don’t have on the boat. We had a few ounces of MEK to test in small areas. We had less than a liter of acetone and about 3.5 liters of mineral spirits. All three seemed to do the same thing, none better than the other. Since we had more mineral spirits than the other two that became the solvent of choice.
My first thought was to find out where we could get more MEK or acetone so I went to Facebook. I know, you are thinking she’s lost her marbles. Maybe–probably, There is a really good Facebook page for Columbia cruisers and I thought I’d ask them where to get our supplies. I explained our project and what I was looking for and within an hour I had a reply. Just not the reply I expected. I was told to “never, ever ask a local Colombian for acetone as it is a key ingredient used to make cocaine. And if I were to ask around, they would think I was part of the Pablo Escobar family.” What the HELL! Yikes! Won’t go down that road. So, we will make due with what we have on board.
Typically, we would avoid showing pornographic images on our blog, but for the sake of education, we will show you Sweetie without her chaps on. She looks so very sad.
Note the velcro coming off both inside and outside the dinghy, the rub rail (gray & white below the velcro) is coming off and she is all around a mess.
Matt removed the rub rail with little effort and looked mournfully at the mound of glue that had to be removed from the entire circumference of the of the dinghy and the rub rail. All that brownish yellow stuff is old glue.
The port side of the dinghy had been repaired in the past using Matt’s escalator glue (it dries black) so it was a bigger mess. Matt tackled the dinghy first while I worked on the rub rail. We both started with the worst part of the project-the port side.
The troughs had a combination of glue, dirt, sand, and muck. They didn’t need to be totally glue free, but the chunks had to be removed. The two gray outer rails and the white center had to be 100% cleaned with no sticky residue as that is where the new glue would be applied.
It was frustrating because it took a lot of work that garnered very little progress. It takes a lot of patience and elbow grease. You can see that what was once yellow is now almost white again.
After removing the large chunks of balls of glue, Matt used a flap wheel. This removed the last residue of stickiness.
The process for the rub rail was a little different I used a small brush and mineral spirits in a circular motion to loosen up the glue and remove the large chunks. Then I used the scraper to remove the chunks in the troughs on either side. Then I used a bristle pad to get the rest of the glue off.
After the chunks were gone, I used the flap wheel to remove the last of the residue.
It is amazing how nice it looks once all of the old glue is off. The flapper wheel really cleaned it up and removed the last bits of stickiness.
Matt and I talked through the gluing process several times before he mixed the compound. We had a lot of area to cover and a limited amount of time to do it in. First, you mix the two elements together, then you spread a light coat over the dinghy and the rub rail, and then wait an hour. It took us 50 minutes to cover all areas with the first coat. So we had 10 minutes to get a drink, rest, and pat ourselves on the back while the compound sat in a bowl of ice water to prevent it from curing.
The second step required us to reapply another light coat over a 3′ section (both the dinghy and rub rail or both the dinghy and velcro), wait 15 minutes until it’s tacky and then stick the pieces together.
Remember how nice it looked all clean and white – now it is all black and gooey.
We were both working with 1/2 kg can that had to cover the exterior rub rail, exterior velcro and interior velcro. And it had to be applied to all pieces. Did I mention that the temperature speeds up the process and hardens or cures the compound? And did I tell you it is HOT!?
Somehow we managed to squeak every drop out of the can to cover everything we needed. We destroyed several brushes, but it was done.
The only unfortunate thing is that we came up short on one side. We should have started in the middle and worked our way down each side. Either the dinghy was super inflated due to the heat or we were supposed to stretch the rub rail more to make it fit. Too late now, we cannot start over–it is stuck on good!
We let her dry overnight which gave it strength of 32 lbs per square inch. Pretty darn strong.