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1/8th inch thick plates will suffice in S/S on your sized vessel. Use a
thick epoxy to "back" the plates onto a curved surface.. slightly tighten the plate so the uncured epoxy squeezes out and trim the excess. Back-off a bit on the nuts and allow to cure. Polishing with wax or a light coating of oil [or some plastic wrap] on the metal will prevent the epoxy from adhering to it. CM "Wally" wrote in message ... | I'll be making some stanchion base backing plates for my boat sometime soon, | and was wondering what size/thickness they should be. The boat is 18', GRP, | and there are no backing plates at present (3 stanchions each side). The | bolts come through into the cabin and the plates would bear against the GRP | cabin ceiling. | | The plan is to use stainless steel plate, partly for corrosion resistance, | and partly because of the way the stanchion bases were aligned when they | were originally fitted - they aren't all set out such that all through-bolts | are clear of the internal cabin wall (ie, some of the nuts are very close, | such that some plates would have a slot in the outer edge, rather than three | clear holes). I feel that a softer material, such as wood or brass, might | give at the edge and not do the intended job. | | What thickness of stainless should I use? 3-4mm sounds good from a | fabrication point of view, but would it be adequate? | | The bases are 62mm in diameter (about 2.4") - how wide should the plates be? | I was thinking of a rectangular shape with the long side running fore/aft. | Maybe 3" wide and 6" long. | | Given that the cabin ceiling isn't perfectly flat, how should I attain a | good contact over the area of the plates? Would a layer of thin (1-2mm) | rubber help? Or should any packing be solid? | | What about rotating those bases that are poorly aligned, so that all three | holes are clear of the inside wall, filling the old holes and drilling new | ones? | | Any other ways to approach this? Comments invited. | | | -- | Wally | www.makearatherlonglinkthattakesyounowhere.com | Things are always clearer in the cold, post-upload light. | | | |