I just got a SuperFly Hull with no outfitting. When I had my spanish Fly I wished the was a way to carry stuff easily in the boat.
Anyway, thinking about outfitting the Hull. I thought about buying the $25.00/gal foam, and using it (with air bags, or other option to hollow out the mold". Then I thought about caulking 3mm plastic into a top groove and using a latch sea kayak system for internal access.
Would this work, would it be too heavy or am I just being foolish?
Bill
Crazy or good idea?
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- CBoats Addict
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- CBoats Addict
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- Location: Charlotte, NC
SuperFly
Yep it sure was, the plastic looks terrible, but it will be a good alternative at least for me -till the fatboys come in- I had a Spanish FLy, which I liked a lot, but I hardly used it, so this should work for the few times I will paddle it.
Bill
Bill
That liquid foam produces an open cell product, and has little, if any, use in outfitting that I know of. It seems to act like a sponge when submerged in water. The end product would just keep getting heavier with every use on the river.
$25 a gallon was the price twenty years ago, and it took two gallons (one of each of the the two-part mix) to get started. Volume control during expansion was also a problem. Repeated applications would result in uneven consistency and air gaps. The product seemed to promise a lot in terms of ease of use and as a quick solution to "foaming out" a boat. But it just never seemed to work that way in practice.
Even when working with plugs, the stuff has very limited application. I think the building/construction industry finds it good for insulation that is not exposed to water, but I am not even sure about that.
Paddlers just have not found it to be useful, and it has been around for two or three decades. I don't know anybody that has used it twice!
$25 a gallon was the price twenty years ago, and it took two gallons (one of each of the the two-part mix) to get started. Volume control during expansion was also a problem. Repeated applications would result in uneven consistency and air gaps. The product seemed to promise a lot in terms of ease of use and as a quick solution to "foaming out" a boat. But it just never seemed to work that way in practice.
Even when working with plugs, the stuff has very limited application. I think the building/construction industry finds it good for insulation that is not exposed to water, but I am not even sure about that.
Paddlers just have not found it to be useful, and it has been around for two or three decades. I don't know anybody that has used it twice!
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- CBoats Addict
- Posts: 750
- Joined: Mon Apr 12, 2004 5:59 pm
- Location: Charlotte, NC