I've been thinking and thinking about how I'm going to put some sort of padding around my waterbox. I scrapped the piece of foam from the wave venture, it was at the wrong angle and just to big. I cut that thing as much as I could, but it just wasn't going to work out. So I gave in to the idea of using turf around the waterbox. Went to our storage unit to get the turf and came across some of those rubber mats that go under the factory waterbox, fuel tank, ect that were left overs from old hulls. Perfect, they will look super clean and almost factory. But I still wanted to be able to strap them down somehow. Luckily rdrttoy is pretty good at fiberglass(and smart) and came up with the idea of glassing in mounts to use a strap for the waterbox. We got the inserts from Epic Industries (if they aren't on his website email him)
After getting these inserts, I set the waterbox in the hull and measured where the mounts were going to be glassed in. Then Joey mixed up some resin and thickened it up with cabosil until it was the consistency of peanutbutter and glassed them in the hull.
While those were setting up and the fiberglass stuff was out we decided to make a custom battery tray since I will not be using the factory location. I bought a smaller battery so I could do this (I can get the part numbers and the website for who ever is interested) this battery is a lot smaller and will be mounted under the seat opposite of the waterbox.
Here's the weight difference with the batteries. I didn't have the factory battery tray to weigh with my original battery. But you get the idea. I saved some weight this way which will be awesome.
To make the battery tray I covered the battery in turf then wrapped it with shrink wrap to keep it clean. Then covered it with mold wax and mold release pva compound so it was easy to remove. Used left over fiberglass and some carbon fiber from rdrttoy's superjet build to cover the bottom half of the battery.
After it dried overnight we took it out of the mold. It was a bit ugly but after trimming it, it doesn't look half bad. Also put turf in the bottom and sides the battery would be padded.
To strap the battery down we used the same inserts we used for the waterbox. And to attach the battery tray to the hull we used thickened resign as well.
After all the resign was set up and hardened it was time to finally finish the exhaust system. I got some good hose clamps to minimize the risk of something failing and silicone couplers from siliconintakes.com
I glued in all the rubber pads for my waterbox, hooked up the hoses, triple checked that all the hose clamps were tight, and finally strapped down the waterbox using the new inserts. I'm very happy how everything turned out. I think it looks very clean and tidy