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What's your basis for this theory? Are the stringers not wood? What's
the floor made of? I missed the start of this I think. How old is this boat? Shortwave Sportfishing wrote: On 24 Aug 2006 05:50:02 -0700, "jamesgangnc" wrote: I'm thinking you're dreaming about the xray :-) I replaced the floor and some stringers in my 1990 bowrider. It was built with the traditional wood stringers and ply floor. Under the floor the original structure was more like a grid than traditional stringers. The interspaces between the grid was filled with expanding foam via holes in the floor. The holes were then plugged. What I noticed when I removed the floor was that the foam did not perfectly fill each compartment. Since they fill via a hole there is no way for them to really verify that each one is filled completely. A number of them had some water that had eventualy penetrated. Particularly where interior parts had been attached to the floor via wood screws. The water never had a chance to get out so it eventually migrated through the fiberglass and saturated the wood. No way was there anywhere near 900lbs of water involved though. Probably more like 50. The floor had a few soft spots. Test holes in the stringers brought up wood mush. I ended up replacing the outer stringers and reinforcing the inner stringers. After removing everything I was going to remove I left it to dry for about 8 weeks with fans blowing on it. I saturated all the wood that was left with lots of thinned epoxy through holes drilled into it. I know it's controversial but I did not put any foam back in. I rebuilt with a more traditional stringer design and added drain holes though all the stringers at the transom so that any water that gets into it simply drains to the bilge. I also put 8" access holes in the rear between the stringers so I could make sure that the drains did not clog. In truth I probably could have just gone on using the boat. Even with the water and wood rot it seemed structurally sound. I think most of them were laid up with enough fiberglass to compensate for the eventual loss of structural strength in the wood. The boat hull is solid fiberglass - no wood. In theory, there wouldn't be any problem with stringers. In theory. :) |
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