Thread: PT Plywood
View Single Post
  #4   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
JR North JR North is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 388
Default PT Plywood

If the surface is not structural, and you don't need to actually walk
on it, lose the 'wood' thinking angle and consider something like
plastic grate. This would be more weather resistant (depending on
material, UV is a consideration) , water*proof*, would allow debris
and tree junk to pass through instead of collecting on the surface,
not subject to water pooling, and stay looking good without
maintanence for years. You can expand this idea considering, for
instance, vertically oriented wood strips in a grate configuration,
perhaps with spacing of several inches even.
JR

On Fri, 23 May 2008 20:05:19 -0400, DK
wrote:

noela wrote:
I am getting set to build an outdoor train layout. One part of the
layout will be roughly 4'X32' and be built like a deck, flat and
level. It will be supported on 24" centers. I am planning on using
3/4" sheets of plywood, and this is where I have my question. I am
thinking about using Pressure Treated 3/4" plywood sheets, my
reasoning is this: it will be subject to moisture, and maintaining
it, after I have installed the track over it will be a chore. I am
looking at a life time of 10-15 years before replacement. After
reading this thread, I am not sure if I am making the correct choice.
I have selected plywood as it will allow me to maintain a flat and
level surface, rather than use structural wood. I would really
appreciate any input from this group, even though it sounds as if this
topic doesn't belong here.
Thank you.


Buy regular CDX. The "X" is for exterior glue. Save the money.

HOME PAGE:
http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth
--------------------------------------------------