Friday, June 28, 2024

Gluing the Seams

 After a couple of weeks off, by mid-June, gluing the hull, the bow and stern tapes, gluing the deck seams and then filleting the deck underside, taping seams and undercoating were complete.

Filling seams with epoxy from a syringe is an art for a steady hand. Over applications, zig-zags and drips need to be cleaned up immediately and any stains from the thickened epoxy need to cleaned off with acetone. The consequences of not removing these from the panels led to oversanding later.

Acetone was cheapest from Rona in 2023. Get a large can. Acetone is invaluable for cleaning off epoxy and removing dust between sandings.

 

Using electrician taped doweling on the underside on the deck at both ends kept bow and stern portions of deck stitched straight until seams were glued.




Removing wires for gluing seams was misery. Buy a soldering iron.

My hand control when applying the thickened epoxy along the seams was not accurate and I tended to glue right up to the stitching wires. So I had more than a few wires epoxied to the kayak. Prying led to extra effort and larger holes. A short application of the soldering iron made pulling wires out easy work. and did not affect the epoxy or the size of wiring holes.

Also because the Solace 16 XL has significant curvature in the deck behind the seat, the manual recommends using concrete blocks to weight the deck down onto the bulkhead behind the seat. I couldn't get enough weight onto the deck to achieve that. So I wound up screwing a temporary block of wood onto the bulkhead at the seat opening. Then I used used two screws to screw the deck down onto the block that was flush with the top of the bulkhead. The two screw holes were hidden by the cockpit coamings when they were installed. 

Building up the keels with thickened epoxy took several applications. But if your kayak is headed to rocky territory, you want this robust.

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