I have a yacht I manage that the owner wants to replace the thin teak deck with a synthetic teak deck for less maintanence. He currently is considering Flexi-Teak and Bogantech. I have gotten quotes for both, but the material is significantly different between the two products. I have little experience with the synthetic teak, except for one yacht I run occasionally that went with Flexi Teak over 2 years ago and it's not showing any signs of wear. The boat being considered, the teak sits exposed to full sunlight all of the time and is not in the shade at all. What's everyone's experiences with either product? Is there another product that is better quality than both of them?
Hi, I am under the impression that all synthetic teaks get very hot in the sun and can actually burn skin.
For Flexiteek, if you look at the back of the color sample piece of the material - that is the (darker) color that it will eventually become in time. They have some lighter colors now. I would advise that you get some samples and lay them out in the sun and see what you think of the heat factor. I'd also look at Plasdeck. I like their colors better.
I would stay away from Bogantech. And this is why: I was looking at them at the Miami show and got a sample I also got samples from plasdeck< I let them sit out in the sun and weather and after about 1 month the Bogantech came apart! im not sure if it would make a difference if it was glued down or not but from wat I've seen I would be afraid to find out. The plasdeck still looks good as new. as for plasdeck I have it in the Head and like it, plan on installing in cockpit when funds allow
While I vastly prefer real teak, Estech is the best looking synthetic I have seen. It is original equipment on Zeelander and Van Dutch boats, and I think there it may be owned by the same company. Best, Maldwin
I went with cork on the Duffy. Probably more expensive and labor intensive than faux teak, but it has been around for 15 years + and holding up well, or so they say. Looks good but not sure I would do it again @ 2 x the cost
I had posted on Marinedeck 2000 previously. It is a cork epoxy composite and I have had experience with many yachts with this application, both interior and on all exterior decks. It is the coolest synthetic my bare feet have walked on and it resists stains, breakage, is low maintenance, and has held up extremely well. Judy
Glad to hear that Judy, and yes that is the stuff I had installed on the Duffy. The shop gave me bogus estimates and the price kept going up. Should have gotten a firm estimate in writing, but being a causal and friendly guy, I did not, serves me well
Fake teak costs as much as real teak, just no maintenance. Flexi now has some new colors from the freshly sanded to the bleached to the weathered. I personally like the "scrubbed" with white caulk, it will go onto a refurb center console this year. Looks like I just cleaned the real thing but doesn't look fake. I'd never use anything but the real deal in a sportfish cockpit, other boats, sure, why not, but it is as expensive as the real thing, at least from the prices I got.
The man made ones can take a lot more abuse and keep on looking good for longer than the real thing from what I have seen and heard.
A few boats around here have the cork based Marinedeck 2000 in the cockpit and it seems to have held up quite well over 10 years, except for the caulking. By the way, don't use black caulking outdoors as it will burn your feet. The only complaint I've heard is that if you spill fish guts on it, it becomes slipperier than an ice rink. All the plastic based imitation teak products are dangerous in the full sun. I'm in Perth/Fremantle and it gets quite hot here. A few have tried it, but since had it removed. You just cannot walk on it in bare feet. However, it would serve quite well indoors though, just don't put it outside.
How has the FlexiTeak been doing ?? Going to see a new install of PlasTeak tomorrow but so far Flexi top of the list.
I had FlexiTeak installed and the material is great. Only issue I had is with the instal. Be careful with the company you hire to do. A great product installed poorly is definitely not worth the time and expense.
If you’re looking for a high end yacht finish check out Eco Deck, a product out of the Netherlands. I saw it on a few boats at BOOT Düsseldorf show and was very impressed. They even offer a high gloss finish for capping rails. A couple of Dutch builders are using them as an alternative to traditional teak.
That owner went with Bogantech at the time which was a disaster. They re-did it once within a year. It later developed big bubbles under it. It doesn't look good now. I had another owner that installed Flexi teak and 10 years later it still looked good when the owner sold the boat. He just used boat soap on it, and spray nine on tough stains.
Wound up ordering made in Miami, PlasDeck after meeting company's owner and seeing his guys do an install on a 70 spt. fish who's captain told me before deciding he did some chemical testing on what he felt were the top 4. Owner recommended the same light color to avoid cooking any bare feet. FlexiTeak was my second choice but since hearing how importatnt the installation is, felt more comfortable with the 12 & 16 year employees I met doing the PlasDeck vs. unknown sub contractors that would install others. Template already done and now in 4 week waiting period for them to make & install. A few photos if not previously posted.