DukMan wrote:So I picked up some cheap mallard dekes from walmart of all places … clearance $15 a dozen… I'm planning on repurposing them and changing them into diver decoys. New paint and rigging them for long lines…
Here is my question… has anyone spray foamed the inside of their hollow ducks. I'm worried their going to get shot to hell… I know they were cheap but I don't want sinking dekes in the spread.
My idea is to drill two small holes in them… one in the bottom and one at the base of the neck and spray in expanding foam, allowing it to expand and seep out the holes if need be… then clean out the holes epoxy them and paint them up…
Any tips… suggestions… ideas would be great… thanks!
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
The Duck Hammer wrote:The expanding foam in a can is open cell foam. Therefore when they get shot your extra effort has created super sinkers not battleships.
expanding foam bad. Hot glue good. Don't waste your time. Mine sank faster than a fat girls prom dreams.ohioduck wrote:The Duck Hammer wrote:The expanding foam in a can is open cell foam. Therefore when they get shot your extra effort has created super sinkers not battleships.
This. I tried it on a couple of wood duck decoys. they took on water and sank like the Titanic.
Rick wrote:My hot glue must be defective, because all of my hot glue decoy repairs have eventually lost their grip. If I can't "weld" a hole closed with a soldering iron, I 3M 5200 it.
Rick wrote:My hot glue must be defective, because all of my hot glue decoy repairs have eventually lost their grip. If I can't "weld" a hole closed with a soldering iron, I 3M 5200 it.
Bad17 wrote:Rick wrote:My hot glue must be defective, because all of my hot glue decoy repairs have eventually lost their grip. If I can't "weld" a hole closed with a soldering iron, I 3M 5200 it.
Rick I don't know where you are located at but I hunt east and northeast Texas and the hot glue has worked good for me. I could see where really cold temps could affect it or maybe even salt water but all of my hot glue plugs have always held.
Knock on wood.
Rick wrote:And it be more hot than cold here. I've not tried preheating the area to be glued, as Olly's suggested, but I've hot glued dozens of decoys and ended up redoing was sure seemed the most of them.
A trick I've not tried but that's interested me is sticking a sliver of plastic oil jug in the shot hole and lighting it to burn and melt down into the hole.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
blockmaker wrote:Patch with 5200 and don't shoot the decoys! On my buddy hunts we have a pot, 10 bucks every time you shoot a decoy. Now I guide some and I try my best to explain to my sports about that but it does happen.
Bad17 wrote:That's one thing I don't do is drink when I'm duck hunting. Know plenty that do.
Bad17 wrote:If you do that's what you do. I'm not judging. I just don't. I live to duck hunt. I know 2 things ducks and baseball. That's my loves.
Olly wrote: We're still the bastard pirates of the duck forum world.
The Duck Hammer wrote:Rick wrote:And it be more hot than cold here. I've not tried preheating the area to be glued, as Olly's suggested, but I've hot glued dozens of decoys and ended up redoing was sure seemed the most of them.
A trick I've not tried but that's interested me is sticking a sliver of plastic oil jug in the shot hole and lighting it to burn and melt down into the hole.
I tried that with shotgun hulls but it always just melted the decoy too. Course I was trying to fix some of my dads old beaters he used in high school so they may have just been the thin plastic they were made from.
blockmaker wrote:...and don't shoot the decoys! On my buddy hunts we have a pot, 10 bucks every time you shoot a decoy. Now I guide some and I try my best to explain to my sports about that but it does happen.
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