Bow stop wearing down fiberglass

rooftop

Steelhead
My fiberglass drift boat has quite a few road miles this year and I've noticed significantly more wear on the bow. Do any of you do anything to recoat your bow or protect it? Do I just wait until the whole boat needs a visit to Clacka for a recoat?
 
My fiberglass drift boat has quite a few road miles this year and I've noticed significantly more wear on the bow. Do any of you do anything to recoat your bow or protect it? Do I just wait until the whole boat needs a visit to Clacka for a recoat?
Sorry not to answer your question directly, but my buddy's drift boat was bouncing around quite a bit on the trailer. I suggested he move the strap aft a bit. The revised geometry reduced the on-trailer bouncing significantly, which I have to imagine helps save wear and tear on the bow where it meets the bow stop. Good luck with your potential repair/maintenance!
 
Pics? If its through the gel coat and into the cloth/mat you probably want to patch it up with some epoxy and filler.
 
I'll need to drop it off the trailer to get a picture, and the weather is suggesting I don't go out this weekend. I think it's getting through the gel coat now.
 
Re-applying gel coat isn't particularly difficult. One of the many things most can learn through YouTube. I've done it many times.

Just takes some sanding and other prep work, then not much different than applying thick paint. Sand that down paint if you want to and you're set.
 
I made the mistake of using a polyester resin with glass matting to repair the transom on my boat. A few years later I sanded out all the disbonded crud and applied epoxy resin with glass which I sanded and painted. It's easy to do.
 
Mine was doing that as well. When I had the gel coat redone on the boat I stopped by Clackacraft and they suggested that I change the strap so that it pulls down on the bow eye so that the front of the boat wasn’t bouncing as much. Added a bolt across the bracket that holds the winch to lower the pulling point. I also place a folded microfiber cloth between the stop and the boat. That has reduced the wear.
 
I made the mistake of using a polyester resin with glass matting to repair the transom on my boat. A few years later I sanded out all the disbonded crud and applied epoxy resin with glass which I sanded and painted. It's easy to do.
Depends on the boat. I think most small boats/drift boats use epoxy resins. My big ocean boat is all polyester resin. You just want to stick with whatever is already there if you can identify it.
 
Depends on the boat. I think most small boats/drift boats use epoxy resins. My big ocean boat is all polyester resin. You just want to stick with whatever is already there if you can identify it.
Huh! To the original poster, I stand corrected.
 
Typically epoxy bonds readily to polyester resins. I had to recore an older sailboat deck built from polyester utilizing epoxy for all bonding applications. In lieu of gel coat I utilized a high grade marine paint.

IMG_2210.jpeg
 
Clackacraft does use Polyester Resin, btw. You may call to verify, but that's what was on my Clackamax built in 2015 when I had it.
 
Most manufacturers still utilize polyester due to cost of materials in such vast quantities. Ship yards building one off construction with various cores utilize epoxy due to it’s versatility of bonding various materials readily available.
Like Even B says, contact the manufacturer for suggestions, though I wouldn’t hesitate to use epoxy if the cloth itself is exposed.
 
I see you're in Portland. I have lots of fiberglass and resins if you ever want to swing by for me to look at it. My guess is that the glass is fine, though. More than likely, this is just a gelcoat issue. We're doing a lot of speculating without having seen a photo currently.
 
I see you're in Portland. I have lots of fiberglass and resins if you ever want to swing by for me to look at it. My guess is that the glass is fine, though. More than likely, this is just a gelcoat issue. We're doing a lot of speculating without having seen a photo currently.
Thanks. Pure speculation has created some great discussion though. :)
 
easy fix...roll it over and orbital sand the bottom, fill any deep gouges with epoxy resin and filler, apply two coats of Sea Eagle High Build Tuff Stuff, finish with a coat of Rustoleum Topside. Have done this to three Clack's.
 
easy fix...roll it over and orbital sand the bottom, fill any deep gouges with epoxy resin and filler, apply two coats of Sea Eagle High Build Tuff Stuff, finish with a coat of Rustoleum Topside. Have done this to three Clack's.
my Clack Magnum had been a duck hunting boat, had the hell beat out of it, gouges into the outer cloth...what the bottom looked like using the method I offered..
20150115_144744 (2).jpgIMG_20150307_153251 (4).jpg
 
Today as I glanced at the titles of all the threads, this one computed as "Stop bowing down to fiberglass." :ROFLMAO:

(I happen to like fiberglass boats. Mostly they're a bit out of my "class.")
 
That almost looks like Wetlander. I used that on my Alumaweld and loved it. Only had the boat slip off the bank and try to float away once. :)
Found out about Tuff Stuff from a seasonable guide in Alaska a couple of decades ago, told me the lodge fleet of riveted jon boats (need them light for manhandling) that they ran hard on the river began leaking through the rivets after a few seasons of hard beatings, so they would roll on a couple of coats, which applies at 8-10 mils per, sealing hulls for seasons to come. Tuff Stuff is commonly used on all kinds of boats up there. I've used it on a friend's leaking Smokercraft, which is still leak free a decade later, and on several glass boats with great results.
 
My fiberglass drift boat has quite a few road miles this year and I've noticed significantly more wear on the bow. Do any of you do anything to recoat your bow or protect it? Do I just wait until the whole boat needs a visit to Clacka for a recoat?
One of these might work for you. I made one out of some stainless steel that I had kicking around. Works well, no more wear.IMG_8659.jpeg
 
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