Repairing teak on a Typoon
Moderator: Jim Walsh
Repairing teak on a Typoon
Over the winter the starboard cleat was bumped resulting in a fracturing of the board that runs the length of the cockpit. The broken piece is about 1" x 15" and it split at the holes that the cleat bolts were in. I think that it can be repaired with some type of adhesive. I would appreciate suggestions from a carpenter sailor.
Ed
Ed
Teak Coaming fracture
I have pix of problem, but I don't how to attach.
Ed
Ed
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With a drilling fixture and a long bit you could reinforce the glued split with dowels, screws or threaded rods. The holes could then be bunged to become almost invisible.
The butterflies are the accentuate instead of hide approach. I wonder if a fish shape could be developed to do the same job, Steve.
The butterflies are the accentuate instead of hide approach. I wonder if a fish shape could be developed to do the same job, Steve.
Teak repair
Ed,
Steve is giving you good advice. I've had luck with cleaning the newly exposed wood with acetone to help remove the natural oils of teak and then applying a thin coat of epoxy to each surface. I use clamps then to pull the two pieces together, not overly tight, just enough to close the gap and get the excess epoxy to squeeze out. Then using acetone I wipe up the excess squeeze out of epoxy. A little sanding and you're ready for finish. I think the epoxied joint is stronger than the lateral shear strength of the wood fibers. Hope this helps.
Jim
Steve is giving you good advice. I've had luck with cleaning the newly exposed wood with acetone to help remove the natural oils of teak and then applying a thin coat of epoxy to each surface. I use clamps then to pull the two pieces together, not overly tight, just enough to close the gap and get the excess epoxy to squeeze out. Then using acetone I wipe up the excess squeeze out of epoxy. A little sanding and you're ready for finish. I think the epoxied joint is stronger than the lateral shear strength of the wood fibers. Hope this helps.
Jim
Jim Buck
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Member #1004
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Re: Repairing teak on a Typoon
I think this board is your combing board. I split mine while removing it to refinish. I just glued it back together using wood glue and some clamps. Then did the stripping and varnishing and she is like new. West Marine sells teak plugs that you can use to fill holes, again using wood glue, if you find the need.edsanford wrote:Over the winter the starboard cleat was bumped resulting in a fracturing of the board that runs the length of the cockpit. The broken piece is about 1" x 15" and it split at the holes that the cleat bolts were in. I think that it can be repaired with some type of adhesive. I would appreciate suggestions from a carpenter sailor.
Ed
Fractured teak combing board on Typhoon Day Sailer
Thanks to all for sharing several terrific approaches to making the fix. Have a great sailing summer.
Ed
Ed