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I know some folks do it that way (seal one side), but it disagrees with what
the epoxy manufactures say, what Gougeon Brothers say, and others. The existing moisture in the wood will get trapped on 'surface states' in between the wood and epoxy. Rot organisms will then have all that they need ....food (wood), oxygen (unsealed wood 'breathes' as you say), and water (trapped at the epoxy/wood boundary). Not on my boat... Brian "John (scuubydu)" wrote in message news ![]() On Mon, 06 Jun 2005 18:56:39 GMT, Teak wrote: I am close to finishing snip {begin} My two cents worth... As a point of note you should be aware that to epoxy is 100% ok on any (old) wood surface... however (yes there is always a but) The other side of the wood/planking/ply should NOT have any epoxy/poly material applied other than the usual painting to allow the wood "to breath", thereby in most (not all) cases preventing that nasty old boogy called ROT to set its ugly feed in! {end} My two cents worth... John City of Sails Auckland, New Zealand. |