Just saw ad for this. Have a couple uses for it if it really works. Anyone tried it?
I was on a friends boat with the curved pole and we sat together on a 1997 Sslyvan that is narrow compared to todays boat and we fished for crappie and it was good. The poles give each person about 5'' extra room We were sitting in the bow They are a good idea
kandydisbar wrote:
Just saw ad for this. Have a couple uses for it if it really works. Anyone tried it?
Never heard of them Kandy, what are they?
We are talking about the curved seat poles correct. Springfield make them. You need to put floor mounts in for them and that is no big deal. It allows you to get a different seat position if you may be tight on space like being too close to the motor
Gordon
Loc: Charleston South Carolina
Its for scrubbing pots and pans. I have some sanding blocks with the same shape. If these work on pots as good as my sanding blocks work on wood they would be well worth the money.
I thought we were talking about fishing seat poles Sorry
What are we talking about? I got no idea.
Me either! How about one clear picture? Just Sayin...RJS
Gordon wrote:
nano carborundum sponge
Not gonna do a very good job of holding your pole Kandy, but maybe help you get the goo off your fryin pan? That and a little Bartender's Friend. I've never used one, so I got no idea.
Tom Wasz wrote:
We are talking about the curved seat poles correct. Springfield make them. You need to put floor mounts in for them and that is no big deal. It allows you to get a different seat position if you may be tight on space like being too close to the motor
nope. Scrubbing sponges for really nasty burned on pots.
I've never heard of them either looks like it works pretty good 👍 let us know how they work if ya get one Kandy 🤪
I've used the wood sanding ones, look just like those.
Certainly can't think of anything on a BOAT that I would use those on, in any grit MORE COARSE than MAYBE 180, and then only if I had an aluminum boat...... màaaaybe.
The 60, 80,100, &120grit ALL, leave some distinctive scratches, if you inadvertently dig a corner or sharp edge.... do be careful, even on wood.
Prepping a boat to be painted, the WET/DRY sanding sponges in 240gr++, used wet, can be a good thing, even on fibreglass if you are patient and careful.... but only if you will be actually (gel ?)coating the surface again.
For cleaning, SCOTCHBRITE pads come in various "coarsenesses", the WHITE is the least damaging (finest), while still getting "the gunk" off. The "grey" and "maroon" versions are quite aggressive.
As with any product of this nature....test in an inconspicuous/non-critical spot first, please. My 2¢.
Gordon
Loc: Charleston South Carolina
FixorFish wrote:
Certainly can't think of anything on a BOAT that I would use those on, in any grit MORE COARSE than MAYBE 180, and then only if I had an aluminum boat...... màaaaybe.
The 60, 80,100, &120grit ALL, leave some distinctive scratches, if you inadvertently dig a corner or sharp edge.... do be careful, even on wood.
Prepping a boat to be painted, the WET/DRY sanding sponges in 240gr++, used wet, can be a good thing, even on fibreglass if you are patient and careful.... but only if you will be actually (gel ?)coating the surface again.
For cleaning, SCOTCHBRITE pads come in various "coarsenesses", the WHITE is the least damaging (finest), while still getting "the gunk" off. The "grey" and "maroon" versions are quite aggressive.
As with any product of this nature....test in an inconspicuous/non-critical spot first, please. My 2¢.
Certainly can't think of anything on a BOAT that I... (
show quote)
That's dome good info FF. Worth more then 2 cents
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