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On Fri, 27 Feb 2004 07:27:26 -0500, "Marc Beroz"
vaguely proposed a theory .......and in reply I say!: I don't think my foam idea is a smart thing to do but I thought I would ask your opinion before I abandoned the idea entirely. nuff sed. It's a boat. Your life may depend on it. It's a stress area. You have access. Do it properly. I would also be looking at what is wrong with the design/surrounds that the ply turned to mush. Why did the water get in? Design or build? Accident? rebuild the area and some around it. Boats are not cheap. I have a Rhodes 22 sailboat with some plywood core in the bow that turned to mush. Water entered through a poorly sealed hole for a cowl. Last October I scraped out the rotted core using wire. I was able to do this from the existing cowl hole. The core I now need to replace extends about 1 foot back & 180 degrees from the edge of the cowl opening. Ideally I would push in epoxy with filler to fill the void but can't see an effective way of doing that & repair such a large area. Then I thought about how handy it would be to use an expanding foam to fill this area & then seal the edge with epoxy at the cowl. The deck is very strong & does not flex. I don't think my foam idea is a smart thing to do but I thought I would ask your opinion before I abandoned the idea entirely. Any thoughts on fixing this without cutting some fiberglass skin would be appreciated though I do have excellant access to the damaged area from inside the boat. Thanks Marc ************************************************** ** sorry ..........no I'm not! remove ns from my header address to reply via email Spike....Spike? Hello? |
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