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  1. #1

    replacing the floor

    About a month ago, motivated by 1) photos of beautiful flooring in other Hatteras yachts, including MikeP's 53MY, and no, I can't afford to buy it for the floor, and he doesn't hire out, sadly 2) the shabby state of the carpet in the salon of my 36C, I decided to put a new floor in my boat. After some thinking and inspection of various samples on the boat, I decided on Lonseal in a mahongany and holly look- obviously, this is not real wood, but it will match fairly well, and be a lot easier to clean and maintain. Carpet doesn't seem to last a long time. We have enough to do the salon and the head. The carpet in the galley and stateroom has held up well enough, since it isn't in the sun ever and doesn't get walked on as much.

    So today, with my installer otherwise occupied and too busy to return phone calls, and the day off, I began removing the carpet. Under the carpet, as it turns out, is vinyl flooring- possibly even two layers of it, over what looks like 3/4" plywood. I'm not sure this is in good enough shape to put the Lonseal on top of. Since the hatches were trimmed to allow the carpet to wrap downwards and staple to the side of each hatch, they are also loose and will have to have wood strips added to them at least on some sides, so that they won't rattle and so there won't be visible gaps between them.

    I can tell already that this job will be the gift that keeps on taking, not giving. This will be interesting. It will certainly solve the problem of what to do with my spare time for the next few weeks.

  2. #2

    Re: replacing the floor

    Jim, do you know whether or not the vinyl is that asbestos shizzle they used back in the day?

  3. #3

    Re: replacing the floor

    FWIW, if OEM linoleum flooring, any Hatt of the age most of us here own/are interested in, will probably have had asbestos-backed linoleum. Armstrong was a standard lino on Hatts; their linoleum, (as well as that of most other companies) commonly contained asbestos though the mid-'80s. Adhesives sometimes contained asbestos as well.
    Last edited by MikeP; 06-02-2017 at 06:19 PM.
    Mike P
    San Miguel de Allende, Mexico; Kent Island MD; San Antonio TX
    1980 53MY "Brigadoon"

  4. #4

    Re: replacing the floor

    Putting this down now. 12 mm with 1 mm teal and maple veneer. The edging and joints are all solid stock teak.
    Attached Images

  5. #5

    Re: replacing the floor

    Looks fantastic!
    Looking for a 80 plus foot yacht
    Hatteras of Cheoy Lee

  6. #6

    Re: replacing the floor

    Panels are screwed down over a vapor barrier. Screws will be hidden by 1/2 inch flex shoe molding
    Attached Images

  7. #7

    Re: replacing the floor

    Great job. Looks fantastic
    SEVEN
    1979 53' MY Hull #563
    Antioch, California

  8. #8

    Re: replacing the floor

    Quote Originally Posted by MikeP View Post
    FWIW, if OEM linoleum flooring, any Hatt of the age most of us here own/are interested in, will probably have had asbestos-backed linoleum. Armstrong was a standard lino on Hatts; their linoleum, (as well as that of most other companies) commonly contained asbestos though the mid-'80s. Adhesives sometimes contained asbestos as well.
    Uh oh. Well, I haven't removed any linoleum yet, I've just removed the carpet and pulled the staples out of the hatches. But I'm glad you mentioned it. I have not been wearing a mask, but I will now.

    The plywood top of the three hatches I did so far is pretty deteriorated at the edges. I am starting to think that we should just take the plywood tops off the hatches and replace them altogether.

  9. #9

    Re: replacing the floor

    If you use heat - a heat gun or an old clothes iron - to soften the adhesive, the old stuff will peel up without any drama or dust. I used both heat sources when I pulled all of the old Lino from our 53. Do NOT use any sort of grinder/sander to remove anything associated with the flooring. There may be a layer of adhesive left on the following after lino removal. That can be removed with paint thinner or, if you want to do it faster and nearly die from the fumes, use acetone! For some reason, on our 53, the Lino in the galley was glued down with a fairly thick black adhesive while the adhesive in the rest of the Lino-areas was thinner, more brittle grey adhesive. But heat worked fine on both.

    If the old Lino is firmly attached, you could lay the new on the old but that is not usually recommended for best appearance/long life. You could also lay 1/4 plywood over the Lino and attach the new stuff to that. It's important that the substrate, whatever it is - original Lino, original plywood, new 1/4" plywood - be smooth/level. Any surface unevenness will show in the final flooring, more visibly than it does prior to installing the new flooring.
    Mike P
    San Miguel de Allende, Mexico; Kent Island MD; San Antonio TX
    1980 53MY "Brigadoon"

  10. #10

    Re: replacing the floor

    If the plywood is not real smooth, every defect will show through the Lonseal.
    You wouldn't think so with the thickness of the being what it is, but it does.
    Bob
    "CRAZY HORSE"

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