: . . .There's a downside to that too, the webbing won't last forever and will
: eventually need to be replaced. Then you have to cut the glass away to
: release them.
The butt of those soft padeyes makes the glass patch over it sit about 1/8th inch higher than the surrounding wood. Just a touch on that bulge with an electric sander and coarse sandpaper will rip through the glass and a bit of the padeye, but completely miss the surrounding area. Poke out the old padeye pieces, use a small piece of medium grit sand paper to clean up any grunge on the inside, insert a new padeye, and slap a patch of epoxy-wetted fiberglass fabric over the site.
For those who either don't like to use epoxy,or who are fans of duct tape: They can seal the inside with a square of the 'universal silver solution', and be done in a moment.
PGJ
Messages In This Thread
- S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes! *LINK* *Pic*
armin -- 3/31/2009, 6:58 pm- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes *LINK* *Pic*
Dave Houser -- 4/2/2009, 3:23 pm- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes
Bill Hamm -- 4/1/2009, 12:34 am- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes
FrankP -- 4/1/2009, 8:22 am- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes
Bill Hamm -- 4/2/2009, 12:48 am- Removing Soft Padeyes
Paul G. Jacobson -- 4/4/2009, 8:52 pm- Re: Removing Soft Padeyes
Bill Hamm -- 4/5/2009, 12:30 am
- Re: Removing Soft Padeyes
- Removing Soft Padeyes
- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes *LINK* *Pic*
armin -- 4/1/2009, 2:22 am - Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes
- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes
- Re: S&G: Thanks to Redfish Kayaks for Soft Padeyes *LINK* *Pic*