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![]() "Tom Dacon" wrote in message ... You know, you might want to re-think your choice of materials here. cedar's pretty soft, and wouldn't look very good very long if left natural and unfinished, both from the weathering and from the damage to the wood that occurs in everyday use - from walking on it, to dropping winch handles on it, to scrubbing away at the mildew to get it looking bright again. Even vertical-grain teak, as tough and oily as it is, weathers and wears and erodes away over time. I've got a teak deck that was over an inch thick when it was built, and there are spots on it that are no more than 5/8" thick now. Scrubbing the deck to brighten it up erodes the soft grain, and then you're tempted to sand it to recover the smooth surface, and before long your three-eights of an inch is gone. You're not likely to find a finish that you can apply to it that will protect it the way you want, without losing the (slight) non-skid properties of an unfinished deck. Varnish it, and it'll be slippery as hell (although you might find a non-skid additive that would remain reasonably clear - some people have successfully used tiny glass beads, which leaves a sort of milky translucence). What did I do with mine? Eventually I gave up and painted it. A number of years ago a renowned boat builder, Renaissance Yachts, launched a Herreshoff Bounty replica, 57', exquisitely built, with cedar decks like you're describing, and I saw it up here in Port Townsend, WA, about a year after it was built. Even after that short time - a year! - the caulk had begun to separate from the sides of the seams. We just shook our heads. I've caulked the teak decks on my 41' sloop several times in the years I've owned it, and generally I could get the caulk to adhere to the sides of the seams for around five years before I started having trouble. However, all that aside, if you can't be dissuaded from using cedar, I'd suggest Alaskan yellow cedar instead of Port Orford, which is getting scarcer and scarcer by the year. My advice? Put another layer of plywood on the subdeck, glass it, and paint it. Tom Dacon For a "wood look," people are reporting good success with laminating PlasTeak or other "plastic wood" rather than teak. Over time it weathers to a salt-washed teak look, and has reasonable non-skid properties that last and last. |
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