Carver Santego 380 Walkthrough Panels

Post Reply
User avatar
Santego2000
Scurvy Dog
Scurvy Dog
Posts: 2
Joined: May 15th, 2023, 2:31 pm
Vessel Info: 2000 Carver Santego 380

Carver Santego 380 Walkthrough Panels

Post by Santego2000 »

Hello - hoping someone here found a solution for replacing the plastic panels that slide into the tracks to close the walkthrough.
IMG_2491.jpeg
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
User avatar
ColRon
Admiral
Admiral
Posts: 581
Joined: April 24th, 2017, 6:06 pm
Vessel Info: 1989 Carver Santego 3867
“Escape Plan”
Location: Murray, KY
Has thanked: 77 times
Been thanked: 157 times

Re: Carver Santego 380 Walkthrough Panels

Post by ColRon »

Welcome aboard! My guess is that you will have to have someone custom make them. Luckily, I still have mine, I'm missing the glass fairing (for lack of a better term) section.
Ron
1989 Carver Santego 3867
“Escape Plan”
Murray, KY

:usa:
User avatar
km1125
Admiral
Admiral
Posts: 3657
Joined: February 28th, 2017, 6:04 pm
Has thanked: 81 times
Been thanked: 1114 times

Re: Carver Santego 380 Walkthrough Panels

Post by km1125 »

Looks like they're slightly curved.

However, I think you could make some out of Starboard if you couldn't find the real ones. The only trick would be forming them over some type of a "mold". I made some forms out of scraps of wood then then heated Corian in my oven and dropped them on the forms. Worked perfectly.

Your pieces might be too large to fit in a conventional oven, but you might be able to rig something with some high wattage lights.
User avatar
JimN
Scurvy Dog
Scurvy Dog
Posts: 22
Joined: July 23rd, 2021, 2:36 pm
Vessel Info: '89 Carver Santego 38
Location: Milwaukee area
Been thanked: 3 times

Re: Carver Santego 380 Walkthrough Panels

Post by JimN »

Starboard (and many other plastic panels like Marine Board (which is basically the same thing, with a different name- it's all UHPE) can be formed using heat. If you call a supplier or the manufacturer, search online or watch videos on YouTube, you'll find the info you need WRT temperature used for forming shapes. IIRC, less than 300°F and time to conform is about right.

You could make them from Fiberglass, too. www.boatworkstoday.com has at least one video showing him making a hatch cover and it would be done in a similar way, using thin bending plywood and wooden pieces that have been cut to match the curve, glued to the backside of the form. He used particle board with a Melamine surface and it's available in 1/4" thickness, but I think I would go to a big box store and buy a small sheet of laminate, use contact cement to attach it to the curved panel (to prevent the resin from sticking) and by making it longer than you need, you can cut it to fit.
Post Reply