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Thanks Steve for offering the other way, but I don't think thats what I
want to do. The teak is about 9/16" thick, so I don't imagine it will be cheap to duplicate. It also goes under cabinets. I won''t remove it from under cabinets, I really only need about a 48-54" wide by 60" long section opened up. Norm Steve Lusardi wrote: The real question is whether your effort if greater than the expense of new wood and I suspect it is by a great deal. Steve "Norm" wrote in message oups.com... I want to repair some floor beams and pull the water tanks for cleaning/inspection. My boat, a Swift 40 built in Korea in 1980, has ribbed stainless nails instead of screws under the plugs. The teak planks are grooved on both sides and the white wood (spruce) is kind of cruciform, although each leg is the same. =||= OK, How can I pull the floor up with the least amount of damage?? I would like to end up with screws in place of the nails. I'm thinking of pulling the 4 floor hatches and then sliding a hacksaw blade in sideways and cut as many nails as I can, then lifting as much as I can, and cut some more. Also, any ideas how to get the white wood out of the grooves? after each plank comes out the white wood will, hopefully be intact and probably stuck to one side or the other. Boiling water? Norm |
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