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Anti-freeze to stop & prevent wood rot
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<blockquote data-quote="Cmack" data-source="post: 79348" data-attributes="member: 1312"><p>Thanks for the welcome. I first heard of this several years ago and have used it on the transom of my fiberglass bass boat that had a wet (not rotten transom) and now after 5 or so years of a V-6 twisting on it, it's still solid and still damp from time to time. I was gonna be using some 2X2 and 2X4 material on the Crestliner that would be under the flooring and was thinking about soaking them to prevent rot. I have already laminated the wood for the new transom and sealed it with polyurethane or I would have tried brushing several coats of anti-freeze on it 1st. It simply slipped my mind....Cmack</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cmack, post: 79348, member: 1312"] Thanks for the welcome. I first heard of this several years ago and have used it on the transom of my fiberglass bass boat that had a wet (not rotten transom) and now after 5 or so years of a V-6 twisting on it, it's still solid and still damp from time to time. I was gonna be using some 2X2 and 2X4 material on the Crestliner that would be under the flooring and was thinking about soaking them to prevent rot. I have already laminated the wood for the new transom and sealed it with polyurethane or I would have tried brushing several coats of anti-freeze on it 1st. It simply slipped my mind....Cmack [/QUOTE]
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Anti-freeze to stop & prevent wood rot
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