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Glad to hear that Corecell has enough give to be bent slightly to match
the curve of my deck surface. I will order Corecell or Divinycell soon (depending on price). Also thanks for mentioning the steps to re-inforce the fasteners for weight bearing hardware. I have already planned to do this for all the hardwares on the deck regarding if they are weight bearing or not (currently, none of the hardware on the deck have any re-inforcing bedding -- water leak and rotten balse core). e question is whether this is good enough for supporting a T-top. You see, the T-top in this boat is quite heavy duty (relative to the size of the boat), and I will be mounting all sort of things into it in the nwar future (such as an electrical box, VHF radio, antenna, GPS...). Obviously, the fasteners of the T-top will be under a lot of stress. I am wondering whether a small area (like 4"x4") of epoxy bedding (with colloidal silica filler) is good enough to handle the load considering the fact that the surrounding area will only be light weight core material. I am wondering whether I should spread the load by using a 12"x12" marine plywood as the core material to anchor the T-top and then adding epoxy bedding surrounding each fastener of the T-top. I figure that Cabosil is the same as colloidal silica that I am planning to use. Good to know that I am on the right track. Jay Chan Jim Conlin wrote: Sheet core-cell can easily be bent to the kind of curve you describe. If it's obstinate, some kerfs cut on the table saw will do the trick. Apply kerf-side up so they can fe filled later with light bog. Bond the sheet down with epoxy-microspere slurry. If the sequence of your construction will be to re-build the deck from the bottom skin up, one way to provide higher-strength patches for the attachment of loaded hardware would be to cut windows in the foam where you want said patches to be, then after the foam's bonded down, fill the windows with high-strength (like Cabosil) filler (Use slow hardener or they'll exotherm badly. ), sand flush, apply the top skin and Bob's your uncle. Just remember where the patches are. . If it's wrote in message ps.com... I discovered that most of the balsa core mateiral in the deck of my 18-ft boat is either rotten or fully wet. I am in the process of removing all the core material from the entire deck. Now I need to figure which alternative core materials I should use for these two different areas: 1. Deck area that don't have any weight-bearing hardware. 2. Deck area where the T-top is anchored on. For the deck area that don't have any weight-bearing hardware, I am thinking of getting something like Corecell or Divinycell that are made from PVC and won't rot. I am thinking of getting them in plain sheets instead of sheets that have been scored (cheaper and in the correct thickness). But according to the supplies web site, plain sheet of those materials cannot be contoured to curved shapes. I am wondering whether I can at least bend the plain sheet just a little bit -- like 1" drop for every 30". Is the plain sheet so rigid that I cannot even use a bag of fertilier to conform it to a slight curve on the deck when I bed it with wet epoxy? The other question is whether epoxy will adhere well with those synthetic core materials. For deck area where the T-top is anchored on, I am thinking of using either marine grade plywood encapsulated with epoxy or many layer of fiberglasses and epoxy. Will marine grade plywood still rot? Which material is better for this area anyway? Thanks in advance for any suggestion. Jay Chan |
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