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Backyard Renegade ) writes:
The problem is that inner layer. Like William said, it is like rods and frequently has voids that run full length or nearly, hidden under the skins. Many times these voids do not show up until you cut, sand, or snap the piece putting it in. Anyway, the fact that the center is harder wood, and frequently void filled, it makes the softer outer skins prone to snapping, much like scoring a tile or piece of glass then bending it... Scotty the voids are easy to find. you take the plywood into a dark room and run a reading lamp over the surface while looking at the other side. any voids show up where the light shines through the thin suface layer. the voids are easy to fill. drill small holes though the face ply and pump in clauk with a calking gun. I prefer to pump in PL Premium polyurethane construction adhesive to fill the voids. You have to put a piece of tape over the wood and drill through it to keep the goop from getting on the wood. I've used the same drill-and-pump technique to repair a split plywood daggerboard. Once the goop was pumped into the spit layers the board was wrapped in plastic and weighed down flat overnight to cure. Still using that daggerboard. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ William R Watt National Capital FreeNet Ottawa's free community network homepage: www.ncf.ca/~ag384/top.htm warning: non-freenet email must have "notspam" in subject or it's returned |
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