Tony B wrote:
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The surveyor told methat generally speaking, when a boat has a teak deck and is 25 years old it is almost a given that the*deck has been penetrated by water and is pretty much shot.
What has your experience been?
*Not true at all.* A teak deck will last decades IF.... IF.... it has been properly treated and maintained.* The two things people do to teak decks that hastens their demise is try to keep it looking like new teak by sanding or using teak cleaners and restorers.* Both of these remove wood, one mechanically and the other chemically, and wood that goes away will never come back.* So a teak deck should never be sanded and never be cleaned with any of the so-called teak cleaners or restorers.
The second thing people do that is bad for the deck is to let deck seams that pull away from one side of the other of the groove go un-repaired.* This is how the water gets down under the deck planks.* Deck seams are actually fairly easy to repair once one learns the proper techniques and uses the proper materials.
Our boat is now 37 years old and it has its original deck.* It has been sanded too much and was in pretty rough shape when we bought the boat.* But a shipwright determined there was still enough deck plank thickness left so he regrooved and reseamed the main deck (a REALLY big job, by the way).* Unfortunately at the time he did this the deck sealant TDS was not on the market, so he used the sealant that was commonly used back then (some 10 or 11 years ago).* While it has held up fine in most areas the parts of the deck that get the most use, side and aft sections, have places where the sealant has pulled away from one side of the groove.* I have been repairing these when I've had time using TDS and the results have been great.* But I still have a bunch of places to fix.
But if the seams are good and the screws are all covered with properly installed plugs, a teak deck is good for a long, long time.* However, most owners of boats with teak decks haven't a clue how to take care of them, and what's really bad is if they try to keep them looking like new teak, aka brown.* Anyone with a teak deck had better learn to love silver-gray because that is the color they want to be and should be allowed to be.
A teak deck, like a fiberglass deck, should be kept clean.* And the ony way a teak deck should EVER be cleaned is with clean salt water and a detergent like Joy that makes suds in cold water.* We use a conventional string mop to wash our deck but a few times a year I use a 3M doodlebug pad to give it a LIGHT scrubbing.* When one does this, they should ALWAYS go across the grain of the wood except in places where deck hardware precludes this.* And a teck deck--- or any teak-- should NEVER be powerwashed, even on a light setting.* Even doing this one time will start the wood surface crevicing and once it starts the weather will keep it going.
So.... a teak deck can be a wonderful thing but only if it is treated right.* I believe a teak deck offers superior traction wet or dry over any other deck surface.* However it is not an ideal deck surface in hot climates because in the sun it can get very, very hot.* Not so much a problem if you wear shoes but if you like to go barefoot on the boat a hot teak deck is not something you'll want to walk on.
The rusting of the top surface of fuel tanks is very rarely caused by water getting down though the deck itself.* It is almost always caused by water leaking down around the fuel tank fill fittings in the deck.* Their bedding can dry out or deteriorate at which point water can get underneath, run down the filler hose, and pool on top of the tank.