Sailing World

BO-PEEP II 75-YEAR REFIT

- By Ronald Lane

The motor yacht Bo-Peep II is a 55' bridge deck cruiser designed by Hacker-Fermann Navel Architects Co. of Detroit, Michigan. In 2001, BO-PEEP underwent a major refit with extensive use of WEST SYSTEM® Epoxy. Two decades later, the benefits of this approach are apparent in hull longevity and strength; dry bottom blanks, frames, and keel; a dry bilge; dry bronze thruhull fittings, hardware fasteners staying put; shorter shipyard haul-outs; and the propeller shaft remaining properly aligned. We no longer have rotted planks or loosened fasteners to replace, seams to caulk, or corrosions headaches.

Built by Defoe Boat and Motor Works in Bay City, Michigan in 1926, Bo-Peep

II has been in my wife Gene’s family since 1951. This mahogany boat was the second of four 55' motor yachts Defoe built from this design. With her original name unchanged, Bo-Peep II has been documented by the USCG (U.S. Coast Guard) since its launch in 1926.

My father-in-law, Louis Bonner, bought

Bo-Peep II in 1951 and over the years made several modificati­ons to the boat. By the time he passed it on to his daughter Gene in 1989, the boat needed some repairs including refastenin­g. Of the repairs we had done at that time and since, the repairs made with WEST SYSTEM Epoxy held up best. This work was completed by shipwright Rick Ryan, who was very knowledgea­ble about boat repairs because his family owned several marine-related businesses. Gene and I married in 1993. We moved

Bo-Peep II from Houston to Seattle by truck in 1997 because we wanted to explore one of the best places in the world for our type of cruising. We hauled out the boat in late 2000 for routine hull maintenanc­e and to correct a laundry list of problems that a surveyor had identified: Weakened wood in a wet area of the hull, “tired” transom planks and rot in the structural framing.

The stem knee, which hadn’t been replaced since the Fifties or Sixties, needed attention.

The upper keel, keelson, and lower frames in the bilge were rotting. Several of the original steam bent oak frames had been broken by lift straps when the boat was unloaded after the move in 1997.

The original iron bolt fasteners in the bilge stringers and floors were not holding due to galvanic corrosion. Some were totally consumed by corrosion.

Checks in the aged original white oak keel also needed attention again.

These defects were mainly the result of poor performed repairs. The era of the previous repairs could be identified by shipwright techniques and material types. But the repairs Rick Ryan had made in 1989 with WEST SYSTEM Epoxy were still holding strong in 2000.

The joints repaired with WEST SYSTEM Epoxy were mechanical­ly sound. The old wood repaired with epoxy didn’t break, but the wood that wasn’t epoxied broke. The plank seams that were filled with thickened epoxy remained watertight.

The lift operator in Seattle broke a plank next to the aft strut by raising the boat before the hold down chain was removed. The plank split, but the epoxy-bonded seam didn’t release: the plank leaked, the seam didn’t.

The planks were fastened with silicon bronze screws embedded in epoxy. During their removal more than a decade later there was no evidence of corrosion. The screws were epoxy bonded so securely that removing them from the frames required a mini torch. The epoxy used to repair checks, knotholes, and other defects in the keel remained sound with no deteriorat­ion. Most of these repairs were made by injecting epoxy into the void with a caulking gun.

I was impressed by the strength of the epoxy on some marginal wood repaired in 1989. I called Rick Ryan in Houston for more details about how he’d used WEST SYSTEM Epoxy. He said he’d used the Wooden Boat Restoratio­n & Repair manual and made a few phone calls to GBI Technical Support.

We considered our choices: Continue the ongoing patchwork of “repairs as needed” requiring more frequent trips to the shipyard, or replace all the bad parts with new ones. We chose the second option, which gave us the opportunit­y to inspect parts of Bo Peep II not seen up close since 1926.

We based our 2001, 75-year refit plan on the knowledge of Rick’s prior repairs. However, Rick Ryan had made his repairs without the luxury of extensive disassembl­y and had to inject the epoxy with a caulking gun in several places. Removing the keel required a lot more disassembl­y and made it obvious that most of the wet area of the hull needed replacing. Many of the epoxy repairs were crosscut through during the keel removal, giving us a closer look at the original epoxy repair. Realizing that the epoxy had saved “that old wood” gave us a lot of confidence in using it on new wood.

The refit plan was to epoxy coat any wood that might be exposed to water. The number of coats would vary depending whether the wood was likely to be occasional­ly exposed to moisture, or be submerged (such as outer keel and planks). Our concept was to replace the old, tired wood with new wood using exactly the same methods and sizes used by Defoe Shipyard during the boat’s constructi­on. We would simply seal the new wood with epoxy and use epoxy thickened with 404 High-Density Filler to bond the joints.

We stayed with the traditiona­l planking except we coated the planks with epoxy, substitute­d silicone bronze screw fasteners embedded in epoxy in place of the original rivets, and bonded the seams with thickened epoxy. This approach strayed a bit from Rick

Ryan’s previous repairs and the Wooden Boat Restoratio­n & Repair manual.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? 1989 keel check with epoxy repairs still good.
1989 keel check with epoxy repairs still good.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States