@@nevinbeaver1111 no, there are limits on the amount of side-firing guns the boats can arm. Missouri is one of the only boats that’s allowed to mount two side firing guns, and they can cause a lot of damage based on the rate of fire and concentrating damage
@@davidbell4986 we’re still kicking. Guns are typically made locally, here is a tutorial video ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-cBdEDcTQO7g.html It’s best if you can link up with someone in your general area to help out, let me know if you want to be connected
The right RTV can be better in some circumstances. I use sensor safe Ultra-Black RTV or Ultra-Grey RTV. Both work equally well against water and oil and other liquids and are somewhat reworkable. Reworkable, as in you can remove it and do repairs on the board later on. But certainly use epoxy if you don't plan on ever changing any components or you want to keep others from modifying or reverse engineering it. ;)
@@10100rsn thanks for the tip. I’ve used RTV a few times recently and it’s held up so far. In this hobby, if something on a board fails then the whole thing will be replaced because they are rather cheap ($10-$25) and almost all participants (myself included) lack the expertise to troubleshoot at the board level. Robustness is also important as the components get moved around, tossed in spare parts bins, etc. some folks still use rtv for watertight boxes, but the most common method today is the e6000 coating shown at the end