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Boat House
1960 lone star king commander small leak at seam
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<blockquote data-quote="el_cheapo" data-source="post: 462967" data-attributes="member: 20910"><p>Not the expert but I can't believe there's no answers on this. Some older boats had kind of a solder ish material in the seams sometimes it can be heated up and "reflowed" not sure if your boat did or not. Also loose rivets can be tightened back up with a couple hammers, hold a heavy one on one side and pop the other end it'll fatten them up. After that if you still have issues i'd go for the 5200</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="el_cheapo, post: 462967, member: 20910"] Not the expert but I can't believe there's no answers on this. Some older boats had kind of a solder ish material in the seams sometimes it can be heated up and "reflowed" not sure if your boat did or not. Also loose rivets can be tightened back up with a couple hammers, hold a heavy one on one side and pop the other end it'll fatten them up. After that if you still have issues i'd go for the 5200 [/QUOTE]
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Boat House
1960 lone star king commander small leak at seam
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