Marine
Heavy-gauge thermoforming produces large marine parts: helm consoles, hatches, deck modules, liners, storage compartments, and structural components, UV-stable, corrosion-immune parts at large sizes. Floe Thermoforming's parent FLOE International builds boats, docks, and lifts with the same forming, fabrication, and assembly capabilities, so marine is a core line, not a stretch.
Parts for Marine
- Helm consoles and dash assemblies
- Hatches, lids, and access doors
- Deck modules and liners
- Storage compartments and seat bases
- Dock and lift structural components
- Hull and deck cosmetic panels
Why this industry forms
Marine is native ground: Floe Thermoforming is the thermoforming division of FLOE International, which builds docks, boat lifts, and Varatti Boats. The same heavy-gauge floor forms consoles, hatches, and deck modules that live in water, sun, and spray.
Large-format forming turns multi-piece marine assemblies into single durable parts, and UV-stable materials hold color and finish through years of on-water exposure.
We build across the floor
Questions OEM engineers ask
Does Floe Thermoforming have real marine experience?
Yes. Floe Thermoforming is the thermoforming division of FLOE International, which manufactures docks, boat lifts, and Varatti Boats in Minnesota, marine is a core product line, not a stretch.
Will formed marine parts survive water and UV?
Yes. UV-stable, corrosion-immune materials are selected so consoles, hatches, and deck parts hold color and structure through years of marine exposure.
Can you form large one-piece deck and console parts?
Yes. The 25 ft forming envelope covers large helm consoles, deck modules, and liners as single formed pieces.
Can you match a Class-A cosmetic marine finish?
Pressure forming delivers Class-A surfaces and grained textures for visible consoles, dashes, and cosmetic panels.
Send us the part. We'll tell you how to build it.
Upload your drawing or describe the program. NDA-friendly. We review every RFQ ourselves, response within 1 business day.
