Welcome to Carver Yachts Owners Forum

We are a boating forum for owners of Carver Yachts to enthusiastically discuss all aspects of Carver Boat ownership. Whether you are looking for your first Carver or currently own one, you are sure to feel at home on CarverYachtOwners.com

You are currently viewing our board as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to searching the forum topics, post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

New to me 82 Carver 2687 Monterey

Are you a new member? Stop in and say hi!
User avatar

Topic author United States of America
Acableguy06
Scurvy Dog
Scurvy Dog
Posts: 1
Joined: December 13th, 2024, 4:37 pm
Vessel Info: 1982 Monterey 2687
Location: Ohio

New to me 82 Carver 2687 Monterey

Postby Acableguy06 » December 21st, 2024, 3:46 pm

Found this forum while searching for things about my new 2687. Overall seems to be a very sound boat and will be working on some things over the winter to prepare for the warm weather and get her in the water for the summer.

I have found one possible concern on a stringer that may or not be an issue some advice may be needed to see if its an issue or not and a repair or let it go.

On the port stringer under the motor mount area the fiberglass is not bonded to the stringer side. It is still in once piece but has like an air bubble between the glass and stringer. probably about a foot - foot and a half. Wood/metal still feels solid and no cracking in the fiberglass anywhere. I was curious if this area may be a steel channel portion that the motor mount attaches too and the glass became un-bonded from it? No cracks where the hull and stringers meet. just rear of this area there is a area that looks to be a drain channel from once side of the stringer to the other and can get my finger in there and the wood is solid there and the glass is still bonded. Hull and stern all very solid no cracking or any evidence of water in any parts of the stringers, stern, or hull. I will try to get some pictures of this area this week when I go to get some more info.

As of right now I have very little money into the boat/trailer but if this is going to be a big deal would like to cap it off now.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.

User avatar

United States of America
waybomb
CYO Moderator
CYO Moderator
Posts: 2504
Joined: February 5th, 2013, 9:24 pm
Vessel Info: 1995 Boston Whaler Rage15
1987 3697 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar 46 Kevlar Vee offshore
1969 15' Glasspar / 1967 Johnson Electromatic 85
Location: Saint Joseph,Mi
Has thanked: 53 times
Been thanked: 426 times

Re: New to me 82 Carver 2687 Monterey

Postby waybomb » December 21st, 2024, 9:45 pm

Welcome aboard!

I would get additional advice to this, because I could be wrong. I'm guessing this is a factory flaw
I would drill a hole into the fiberglass to see what is going on inside. If nothing, then prep the area for a fiberglass patch and patch it.
If the wood inside is rotten, well, then you have to make some decisions.
Thanks
Fred
1969 Glaspar Avalon /1967 Johnson Electromatic 85
1987 Carver Mariner
1988 Cougar Kevlar 46' with triple blown 572 ci
1995 Boston Whaler Rage
Past - 1988 2807, 1989 4207 Aft

Canada
Viper
CYO Supporter
CYO Supporter
Posts: 5979
Joined: July 10th, 2015, 9:58 pm
Vessel Info: 1989 Carver 3807 Aft Cabin
Location: Ontario, Canada
Has thanked: 455 times
Been thanked: 1671 times

Re: New to me 82 Carver 2687 Monterey

Postby Viper » December 22nd, 2024, 9:00 am

Welcome aboard.

Sounds like delamination to me. The most common cause is moisture in the substrate but there are other less scary causes. A fiberglass tech who knows his stuff can sound the area with a mallet as a first step, and can also take a moisture reading for additional information. If the conclusion points to a possible problem with the core, taking core samples would reveal a true picture of what's going on and help decide how to remedy the issue. It could be a simple fix or a very serious one.

You can go for years with wet stringers before encountering structural and mechanical problems as a result. Until you probe deeper, you won't know how bad or good things are. If the core is wet, it won't get better, it'll only get worse and eventually accelerate at an exponential rate.

Here's hoping for the best outcome. Keep us posted.

Return to “Introduce Yourself!”



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests