🛥️ Upgrade your deck game with comfort and style that sticks!
OCEANBROAD EVA Foam Boat Flooring offers a premium 6mm thick closed-cell foam sheet with durable 3M adhesive backing, designed for marine environments. Its faux teak V-groove surface provides excellent traction and drainage, while the foam’s heat, water, and UV resistance ensure long-lasting protection and comfort on boats, RVs, and more. Easy to cut, install, clean, and replace, it’s the perfect upgrade for any watercraft deck.
Item Thickness | 0.24 Inches |
Item Form | Sheet |
Specification Met | True |
Number of Items | 1 |
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 46.6 x 6 x 5.75 inches |
Package Weight | 2.95 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 96 x 45.6 x 0.24 inches |
Brand Name | OCEANBROAD |
Country of Origin | China |
Model Name | OBF2212 |
Suggested Users | unisex |
Manufacturer | OCEANBROAD |
Part Number | OBF22124501GYB |
Outer Material | foam |
Size | 96''L x 45.6''W-30.4sqft |
Sport Type | Boating |
L**K
OCEANBROAD EVA Foam Boat Flooring
Excellent quality flooring. Easy to install, feels great underfoot, and provides excellent grip. Makes the boat look clean and new again.
Z**N
Great flooring and easy to install
Replaced the floor in my old boat and this stuff was super easy to stick on and makes the boat look great. Other reviews recommended using extra spray glue but I just used the adhesive on the flooring and it hasn’t shifted at all.
M**M
Looks great!
Excellent!!We used on metal gates for privacy,Extremely fantastic adhesive looks fantastic lightweight easy to handle easy to cut fabulous product!New Updatedoes not stick to fences very goodIt’s peeling off after a few weeks, but that’s a fence not a boat deck
A**R
Put this stuff on everything!
This stuff is awesome!!! Been putting it on all the outdoor steps and it’s fabulous! Much cheaper than those sets you can buy and you can cut this to fit. Put it on my RV steps too! Great traction, the water runs off in the channels, it has a sticky back and the stick stays stuck. It’s great!
D**R
Revised Review: Great Customer Service. Product Good for Some Applications, not all
I'll leave my original review at the bottom. Here are my reasons for updating it and my conclusions.I contacted the Oceanbroad people and they were polite and understanding. They set up a ZOOM call to hear my opinions, and offered to replace the material. They genuinely want to take care of customers and launch a quality product. I give them points for that.I have a 30-foot sailboat that sits on a mooring in Miami where it gets full sun exposure. If you keep your boat in a garage or under a cover, or use this for interior floors, I imagine you'll get plenty of use from vinyl teak. And this will be the case for many boaters. The material is attractive, sticks well, and it's easy to work with. It's comfortable to walk on barefoot and makes excellent non-skid.If you have a cruising vessel exposed to full-time tropical sun, thermoplastic material will probably serve you better—or if you have the funds, real wood can last 50 years.• Vinyl is affordable and easy to work with for low-sun applications. In high sun, it shrinks and deteriorates.• Thermoplastic is slightly harder to work with and costs more but has a five-year guarantee. I haven't tried it to verify the results, and guarantees usually cover material costs only. Measuring and cutting panels and borders is time-consuming. You want to do the job once whether you hire someone to do it or DIY.• Wood is hardest to work with and costs the most, but any problems with it will almost certainly be the next owner's expense. In the long run, it's the best bargain despite the up-front costs.If you're considering vinyl decking, understand that it has its limitations. Vinyl that's UV-rated for 1000 hours will give you 125 eight-hour days of sun. If your boat is only exposed to sun when you use it, that can mean 125 days on the water—which is almost 3 years worth of Saturdays. But if your boat sits uncovered on a mooring, the material can shrink and deteriorate quickly.As long as you understand the pros and cons and choose the right material for your application, you'll be happy with Oceanbroad and their EVA foam boat flooring.Here's my original review.--------------------------I used this EVA teak to create non-skid surfaces in my sailboat cockpit. I bought it because the 3M adhesive sounded like it would last—and so far, it has. But the vinyl has problems:1. Whether this deteriorates because of UV exposure or on its own, it leaves orange "mud" everywhere. Sit on it with a wet swimsuit and you'll have an orange butt. A good scrub will temporarily help but then the problem returns. I can see the molded-in faux wood grain is wearing away.2. After taking time and care to lay out borders and strips, I was disappointed to discover that many of my tight, invisible joints had opened up. If the material was worthwhile, I'd fill the voids with caulk—another project—but that would just make its inevitable removal more of a nightmare. How much re-painting will be needed when I redo this is yet to be seen.3. The orange color is just a bit too bright to be natural (though I let that go at first thinking the material would work out).I did everything right and ended up with what will turn to to be an expensive time suck.
R**G
Looks great.
Great product. Looks good fairly easy to install. It is a challenge removing the backing paper but it sticks good.
J**Z
Se pega super rapido
Excelente
S**N
Easy to work with
I put this flooring down in my 26' runabout boat. The existing floor was carpet over fiberglass. As other reviews have noted, the key is in the prep. I cleaned the floor with a degreaser and let it dry, then wiped it down with acetone just prior to installation. I made a template of heavy paper and taped it down in the boat to make sure it was correct. I rolled the flooring out on clean concrete in the sun and weighted it down for 24 hours. It was flat and easy to work with after that. Put the template over the top and marked it out completely. Put a piece of heavy cardboard underneath under the material to cut through with a razor knife. Peel back the first 6" of paper backing and get the piece started, then peel and stick. Rolled it completely and let it cure for 24 hours. I am amazed at how tight it stuck down and how clean it looks. NO bubbles or blisters. If it stays down and looks good next year I would bump it up to 5 stars.
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5 days ago
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