l008com
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2007
- Messages
- 751
After reading around the forum, I've decided that I don't want to do my own vynil work, making new bow seats & cushions. But I think I'm fully capable of making my own bases, cutting the foam, installing the hardware, and stuff like that. Then I can just bring them somewhere to get the vinyl done.
Which leads me to some questions!
1) I have a bunch of foam I picked up at some home goods type store a few years ago. I used it to pack a disassembled mountain bike into a square box. It's about 2" thick. Is that fine to use? Or let me ask this question a different way: do you use some kind of special 'marine' foam for boat seats, or do you just use regular foam? If it is special, where can I get it? I do need a small sheet of some thinner foam for the kick panels even if my main foam is good. And I might want to do some sandwiching, with a firmer foam base, and softer foam on top. The bow seats on my boat have never been truly comfortable, but I'd like to change that.
2) What do you call/where do you get the screws to mount cushions to fiberglass? I think the original ones had some weird setup, where they would stick into the front of the wood, before you wrapped then. Then the threaded part would stick out the back, which were lined up with the holes in the fiberglass. I'll need a few of those for some of these cushions.
3) I was thinking I'd prime the wood after cutting, before any building, just to give them an extra layer of protection. Good idea?
4) Should I glue the foam to the wood? If I'm using multiple layers of foam, should I glue them together? I would imagine the vinyl seat cover will do a pretty good job of keeping the foam in place, but maybe glue would be good too? If so, what kind of glue would I use?
5) The last two pieces I'm going to make, are on a curve. My suggestion to someone else in another thread, was to sandwich three layers of 1/4" plywood and glue them together in a curve, to make a 3/4" curved piece of plywood. It seemed logical, but all I have is 3/4" (it might even be 1", it looked thick). Is there some other trick to softening up the wood so I can bend it? I plan to try to build some sort of rig that I can sit the pieces in to bend them to the right curve, but this stuff looks like it would just splinter away if I tried bending it like that. It might get softer if I soaked it in water, but wood and water and boats are a bad combo.
That's all I can think of for now, I'm sure there will be more questions before I'm finished
Which leads me to some questions!
1) I have a bunch of foam I picked up at some home goods type store a few years ago. I used it to pack a disassembled mountain bike into a square box. It's about 2" thick. Is that fine to use? Or let me ask this question a different way: do you use some kind of special 'marine' foam for boat seats, or do you just use regular foam? If it is special, where can I get it? I do need a small sheet of some thinner foam for the kick panels even if my main foam is good. And I might want to do some sandwiching, with a firmer foam base, and softer foam on top. The bow seats on my boat have never been truly comfortable, but I'd like to change that.
2) What do you call/where do you get the screws to mount cushions to fiberglass? I think the original ones had some weird setup, where they would stick into the front of the wood, before you wrapped then. Then the threaded part would stick out the back, which were lined up with the holes in the fiberglass. I'll need a few of those for some of these cushions.
3) I was thinking I'd prime the wood after cutting, before any building, just to give them an extra layer of protection. Good idea?
4) Should I glue the foam to the wood? If I'm using multiple layers of foam, should I glue them together? I would imagine the vinyl seat cover will do a pretty good job of keeping the foam in place, but maybe glue would be good too? If so, what kind of glue would I use?
5) The last two pieces I'm going to make, are on a curve. My suggestion to someone else in another thread, was to sandwich three layers of 1/4" plywood and glue them together in a curve, to make a 3/4" curved piece of plywood. It seemed logical, but all I have is 3/4" (it might even be 1", it looked thick). Is there some other trick to softening up the wood so I can bend it? I plan to try to build some sort of rig that I can sit the pieces in to bend them to the right curve, but this stuff looks like it would just splinter away if I tried bending it like that. It might get softer if I soaked it in water, but wood and water and boats are a bad combo.
That's all I can think of for now, I'm sure there will be more questions before I'm finished