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if you use a spray bottle with soap in it and water spray to locate on the item where the leak is, you should see bubbles, decades ago we used to do this on tires that had tubes inside them, once found and really dry there (make sure you mark where the leak is) I have used on a for this super glue in a jell form to repair the hole found at least for this season...
Contact Inflatable boat specialist. There is one that I know of in ventura california. Contact them first and go from there. 3695 East Harbor Boulevard Ventura, CA 93001 (805) 644-6290
Your picture above is of a pool float, but I assume you are talking about an inflatable ring pool. Is that right? If so, this link will take you through a tutorial on how to find and repair pool leaks:
Two ways, one is to move around it slowly using your cheek (face that is). It is sensitive and will pick up the leak easily, and then just mark it with a marker. The other, although a little messy, but extremely effective is to use your bath tub. Best of luck.
You can actually save a BUNCH of money and do it your self its really easy go to a sporting good store or online and look for a raft repair kit takes a couple hours including dry time and costs less than 20 bucks
Absolutely. All sailing and sea-going craft should carry rafts - inflatable vessels which can maintain the lives of stricken mariners until rescue is available.
In all cases, there is a small, factory-manufactured cylinder of highly compressed gas (usually CO2) with a mechanism on it that perforates a given area when actuated -- for example, by pulling a 'string' or by the action of opening a depressurised aircraft door. A parallel would be tripping the plate on a mousetrap -- all that gas is busting to get out, and when its weak point is compromised, that's exactly what happens. In other words, when the cylinder of gas gets a hole punched into it in the right place, the gas inside floods out -- usually into a big plastic bag in the shape of an inflatable raft or vest. Think of it as, all the air that could fill a big balloon, but wedged into something the size of a medical capsule. Pop the capsule, the balloon fills up. Except it's not air, and it's not a balloon.
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