I am working on a 60 foot classic boat de and re caulking the teak deck.
The job now is to remove all (over 1000) the 10mm plugs and screws, re counterbore and replace the screws and plugs.
The reason for removing is where the deck has worn, some of the screws are showing, and many of the plugs are wafer thin, potentially allowing leaks. I have a few difficulties that I could do with some advice on to help speed things up given how many I have to do.
1. Removing the shallow (and deep) deck plugs, at the moment I am using a small gouge or round chisel, cutting round inside the plug and eventually flicking out the surplus, then cleaning up with the gouge. I have a 3/8 forstner coming next week so that may help providing I can get dead centre. I thought about a perspex guide with a 3/8 hole in it to offer over the plug, and use the forstner through that. May work, we'll see. Any thoughts, ideas please?. The forstner may run off where the bronze screws are close to the surface.
Is there a plug available between 10mm and 12mm, slightly bigger than 10mm would be great but I suspect its not an option?
2. Removing the stuck bronze screws 10g x 2 inches. Under the teak is not ply but an epoxy subdeck (laid in 1992). ALL the screws seem to be stuck at that layer, so its possible the teak was laid on wet epoxy, I'm not sure. Many of the screws are snapping presenting a nightmare of drilling out the remainder. The deck beams are Mahogany. My most successful method so far is using a 60w electric rope cutter with a modified blade to transfer heat into the screw. I'm having to use it well beyond its design spec. I could do with more heat. This has reduced the snap rate but not enough. It was also suggested to hit the screw with a driver and hammer before and after heat but I dont feel that this is helping as the screw heads are sitting on firm teak.
I have a fast car waiting if things dont improve !!!
The job now is to remove all (over 1000) the 10mm plugs and screws, re counterbore and replace the screws and plugs.
The reason for removing is where the deck has worn, some of the screws are showing, and many of the plugs are wafer thin, potentially allowing leaks. I have a few difficulties that I could do with some advice on to help speed things up given how many I have to do.
1. Removing the shallow (and deep) deck plugs, at the moment I am using a small gouge or round chisel, cutting round inside the plug and eventually flicking out the surplus, then cleaning up with the gouge. I have a 3/8 forstner coming next week so that may help providing I can get dead centre. I thought about a perspex guide with a 3/8 hole in it to offer over the plug, and use the forstner through that. May work, we'll see. Any thoughts, ideas please?. The forstner may run off where the bronze screws are close to the surface.
Is there a plug available between 10mm and 12mm, slightly bigger than 10mm would be great but I suspect its not an option?
2. Removing the stuck bronze screws 10g x 2 inches. Under the teak is not ply but an epoxy subdeck (laid in 1992). ALL the screws seem to be stuck at that layer, so its possible the teak was laid on wet epoxy, I'm not sure. Many of the screws are snapping presenting a nightmare of drilling out the remainder. The deck beams are Mahogany. My most successful method so far is using a 60w electric rope cutter with a modified blade to transfer heat into the screw. I'm having to use it well beyond its design spec. I could do with more heat. This has reduced the snap rate but not enough. It was also suggested to hit the screw with a driver and hammer before and after heat but I dont feel that this is helping as the screw heads are sitting on firm teak.
I have a fast car waiting if things dont improve !!!