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Old 08-20-2018, 01:13 PM   #1
Denis_Ruso
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How much is tons of water?? I get about a cup of water in all my kayaks just from surf launches. Pretty normal IMO.

Although if you want to silicone any left over openings I don't see anything wrong with that.
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Old 08-20-2018, 02:19 PM   #2
goldenglory18
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+1... how much water is there after a typical day out?

Water in a hull is nominal (this is what dry bags are for.) A lot of water in a hull (enough to loose ballast and sink) is not nominal...
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Old 08-20-2018, 03:40 PM   #3
Iceman
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I usually take on the water when the boat is beached/at shore and it rains, or during long haul travel when it is on the trailer and it rains.
had not heard this one before, little extra goop on the back side would remedy. Some cables do not fill the hole snug on the plug, there should be a rubber gasket sealing the base to the hull.
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Old 08-20-2018, 04:27 PM   #4
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Sorry tons of water may not be the best description...

"Fairly annoying amount of water" might be the better description. The reason I used the word tons was because in our test, I could see water getting in through that fitting at a pretty rapid pace, enough that if it rained for a couple hours while the kayak sat beached, two to three inches of water would collect in the rear of the craft.

We do an eight day kayak camping trip so even though I use dry bags in the hull, moisture can find its way into anything so I want to do everything possible to reduce the amount of water that gets in...because once stuff gets wet while camping, depending on the weather, you may not have another chance to truly get it dry!

So ultimately just trying to keep that thing as water tight as possible. I'll probably re do the fitting to make sure the oring and the fitting are as sound as possible then add some RTV to the backside for extra insurance. Non of my other hobie through hull's do this and I have three others that I have rigged up for some extra electronics.
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Old 08-21-2018, 08:50 AM   #5
Denis_Ruso
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I would just marine goop or carry a hand pump and pump the water out if it builds up too much for your liking. But marine goop is the way to go to seal any holes. If its good enough to seal a thru hull fitting on a boat, it's good enough for a kayak.
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