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Richard Casady wrote:
On Mon, 07 Jan 2008 04:52:02 GMT, "Island Teak" wrote: Any teak deck that requires replacing has probably had that 1/4" worn off in service. Every cruise ship I have been on had teak decks. They didn't maintain them, hosed them down, perhaps, and I don't know why they would wear much if any. Traffic wouldn't do it, those things are big and the wear would be well diluted. The planks were perhaps three inches wide, and must have been maybe 3/4 inch thick? You need a certain thickness, relative to width, to avoid cupping. Of course they don't have to impress the neighbors with well sanded teak. I mean we saw one boxboat in two atlantic crossings. Cruise ships built in the Aker yards in Finland have at least 4" thick teak decks. (I've seen photos). They probably sand them down every year with a floor sander. Never have to replace them during the life of the ship with that much thickness. Evan Gatehouse |
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