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On Mon, 02 Feb 2004 21:35:11 GMT, Rich Hampel
wrote: The underlayment of teak decks on Tayanas is built up of softwood squares individually isolated by dams of polyester. If such underlayment does get wet it usually doesnt not spread accross the whole deck as would be the case with ''sheets' of core filler. Not that you cant get a soggy deck on a Tayana; but, if you do the damage wont be as catastrophic as would a deck with continuous underlayment filler. Teak deck maintenance isnt all that bad if you kkep up a gentle and consistent regime of maintenance. Hell, I bet you expend more time scrubbing a glass deck than a teak deck owner does in periodically looking for loose bungs. Give me a teak deck anytime. So what if it makes the boat a bit more top heavy, **nothing** is this world has the non-dkid ability of bare teak. The opposing view, and no doubt a boat I would love to visit because it looks so nice. This gentleman knows the problems with teak, knows how to deal with them, knows the best case scenario, and considers the net benefit worth it. I do not, although I've seen nice teak over metal decks that would put me off less than teak over cored decks. To each sailor his or her own. The less wood on the outside, the happier I am, but that's me and is totally from the upkeep point of view. R. |
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