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posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
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![]() "Skip Gundlach" wrote in message ups.com... As to KLC's comment about reinforcement, if I could get to them all the way, the discussion of shims/wedges wouldn't be necessary. And, if I could get to them all the way, I'm enough of a belt and suspenders man that I'd likely grind it off and put on new, building up in exactly the same form as original (Pete provided me with the type of cloth used). I can't see how adding wood over an existing tab, and then going over it with FG/resin would improve matters; you're relying on the existing part, and not connecting the new to the bulkhead (I may not have a picture of what was intended, I realize). Thanks for all the commentary and support, in whatever fashion. Today it looks like we'll have a beater Suburban for use in transport and hauling; I'll know for sure by the end of the day. L8R Skip Skip, My outline may have left out steps that I have clearly in mind, but didn't translate into dots on the screen. The way I see it, yes -- you could grind off all the old tabbing and install it new, but then you would have TWO secondary/mechanical bonds, rather than the one secondary (tabbing to bulkhead) and one primary (tabbing to hull, laid-up when the resin was still fresh and molecularly active. My method does rely upon glue (epoxy) between the bulkhead and old tabbing, clamped together with the bolts and battens, all laminated together into one thick tabbing. Unfortunately, if you don't have the access, you don't have the access. So now the question becomes, can you ever make it strong enough without that access? |