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Boat Manufacturing: virtual tour


The final Boat Manufacturing NESHAP regulates fiberglass boat and aluminum recreational boat manufacturing operations. The emissions from these boat manufacturing operations and processes are fugitive in nature. Fugitive emissions result from HAP evaporating from the resins, gel coats, solvents, adhesives, and surface coatings used in these processes.

See the Highlights

Fiberglass Boat Manufacturing Operations

boatThousands of products are manufactured from reinforced plastics. Examples include hulls for recreational and commercial watercraft; bodies for recreational vehicles; building panels, sporting equipment, appliances, and power tools; bathtub, shower, and vanity installations; automotive, aerospace, and aircraft components; and structural components for chemical process equipment and storage tanks. The fiberglass reinforcing in these plastic products improves their structural strength and rigidity, as well as providing high heat resistance and nonconductive properties.

The U.S. boat manufacturing industry produces a wide range of boats, from small canoes and kayaks to large luxury yachts. Basically, the boat manufacturing industry can be divided into eight separate boat segments according to boat size and location of the engine. They are:

Outboard Boats:

Small to medium-sized boats, powered by a self-contained detachable engine, which is attached to the transom at the stern (rear) of the boat. This category of boats includes most runabouts, bass boats, utility boats, offshore fishing boats and pontoons.

Personal Watercraft (PWC):

Small boats (most under ten feet long) powered by water jets instead of by an open blade propeller, on which the rider stands or sits (as on a motorcycle).

Inboard Runabouts:

Mid-sized boats powered by an attached engine located inside the hull at the middle or front of the boat, with a prop shaft running through the bottom of the boat. Over 90% of the boats in this category are tournament ski boats.

Jet Boats:

Small to mid-size boats powered by water jets rather than a gas or diesel motor. The jets can be located at either the stern or inboard.

Sterndrives:

Mid-sized boats powered by an attached inboard engine combined with a drive unit located on the transom at the stern (rear) of the boat. Also known as inboard/outboards or I/Os.

Canoes:

Small boats powered by hand-held paddles.

Inboard Cruisers:

Large boats powered by one or more inboard engines. Two engines are found in over 95% of these boats.

Sailboats:

This category of boats includes all sizes of boats powered, at least partially, by wind-driven sails. This category includes both nonpowered sailboats and auxiliary-powered sailboats that include a motor.

boatFiberglass boats are built from glass fiber reinforcements laid in a mold and saturated with a polyester or vinylester plastic resin. The resin hardens to form a rigid plastic part reinforced with the fiberglass. The resin is mixed with a catalyst, as it is applied, that causes a cross-linking reaction between the resin molecules. The crosslinking reaction causes the resin to harden from a liquid to a solid. Fiberglass manufacturing processes are generally considered either ‘‘open molding’’ or ‘‘closed molding.’’ In open molding, fiberglass boat parts are built ‘‘from the outside in’’ according to three basic process steps:

  1. The mold is sprayed with a layer of gel coat, which is a pigmented polyester resin that hardens and becomes the smooth outside surface of the part.
  2. The inside of the hardened gel coat layer is coated with a ‘‘skin coat’’ of chopped glass fibers and polyester or vinylester resin.
  3. Additional layers of fiberglass cloth or chopped glass fibers saturated with resin are added until the part is the final thickness.

Open Molding

In the open molding process, the surface of the mold is polished and coated with a wax, which allows easy removal of the finished product from the mold after curing. Next gel coat, consisting of unsaturated polyester resin, catalyst, and pigments, is sprayed onto the waxed mold. This forms the outer, visible surface of the boat.

After the gel coat is fully cured, fiberglass reinforcing material saturated with catalyzed polyester resin is applied over it. Two common methods of application are:

  • Chopper gun (spray coat) - the resin, catalyst and fiberglass strand are fed into a gun, and the fiberglass is chopped into short segments and sprayed with the resin into the mold;
  • Hand layup - the resin is catalyzed, then brushed on to layers of glass mat or roving which have been hand fitted into or over the mold.
Air bubbles and other imperfections are removed by hand with rollers. Tools are cleaned periodically of resin, using acetone or a substitute cleaner before the resin begins to polymerize.

outboard motorStyrene is emitted both during the application stage when gel coat or resin material is applied to the mold and during the post-application period when the material cures. Most boat building facilities use high ventilation rates to ensure that styrene levels are below the 100-ppm worker exposure limit established by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). Dilution increases the volume of contaminated air and, because the cost of an add-on emission control system is a strong function of the total air flow, these diluted air streams are more costly to control.

Some facilities designate certain areas for gel coat or resin spraying to reduce the contamination of plant air. In these cases, a spray booth equipped with a dry filter medium may be used to reduce particulate emissions, but diluted styrene emissions are typically vented directly to the atmosphere. Spraying emissions can be controlled through spray gun pressure calibration, operator training and overspray containment.

To review, some of the major steps in making open mold-based products are:

Mold Preparation
Mold Waxing
Resin Preparation
Gel Coat Application
Skin Coat
Fiberglass Application

Closed Molding

In closed molding, the resin is applied to fabric placed between the halves of a two-piece mold. Three basic types of closed molding used in boat manufacturing are resin infusion molding, resin transfer molding, and compression molding with sheet molding compounds.

Emission Considerations

The polyester and vinylester resins that are used in fiberglass boat manufacturing contain styrene as a solvent and a cross-linking agent. Gel coats also contain MMA (methyl methacrylate) as a solvent, and styrene. Styrene and MMA are HAP, and a fraction evaporates during resin and gel coat application and curing. Resins and gel coats containing styrene and MMA are also used to make the molds used in producing fiberglass parts.

Mixing is done to stir the resin or gel coat and promoters, fillers, or other additives before being applied to the parts. Some HAP from the resin and gel coat are emitted during the mixing process.

Resin and gel coat application equipment requires solvent cleaning to remove uncured resin or gel coat when not in use. The resin or gel coat will catalyze in the hoses or gun if not flushed with a solvent after each use.

skiingOrganic vapors consisting of volatile organic compounds (VOC) and HAPs are emitted from fresh resin surfaces during the fabrication process and from the use of solvents (usually acetone) for cleanup of tools, molds and spraying equipment. Organic vapor emissions from fiberglass fabrication processes occur when the polymerizing agents and solvents contained in the liquid resin mix evaporate into the air during resin application and curing. State-of-the-art techniques can economically recover solvents in concentrations above 70 ppm through activated carbon adsorption. However, styrene can polymerize on the carbon and deactivate the adsorber. When solvent vapor reclamation is not feasible, thermal oxidation of the solvent emissions can be conducted with an oxidation efficiency exceeding 97 percent, although the cost per ton of VOC is quite high. There also may be some particulate air emissions from automatic fiber chopping equipment.

Fabric and Carpet Adhesive Operations

The interiors of many types of fiberglass boats and aluminum recreational boats are covered with carpeting or fabric to improve appearance, provide traction, or deaden sound. The material is bonded to the interior with contact adhesives. These adhesives often contain HAP solvents, such as methylene chloride, toluene, xylenes, and methyl chloroform (1,1,1-trichloroethane). The solvents evaporate as the adhesives dry.

Aluminum Boat Manufacturing

Aluminum Recreational Boats Surface Coating

Aluminum is also used in manufacturing a large portion of smaller boats, such as rowboats, canoes, and freshwater utility and fishing boats. Aluminum is used because it is lightweight, durable, and low maintenance. Steps in manufacturing process may include:

Parts cutting and bending
Metal part assembly
Surface preparation
Surface coating
Flotation foam pouring
Carpet installation
Final assembly and rigging

Aluminum recreational boat hull topsides and decks are painted with coatings applied with spray guns. These coatings may be high-gloss polyurethane coatings or low-gloss single-part coatings. These surface coatings often contain HAP solvents, such as toluene, xylenes, and isocyanates.