The stringers should always be bedded with something, otherwise pockets under the stringer will flex in some spots, and will be hard in other spots. As you can imagine any voids will attract water, as in condensation or that being the lowest point and will start the rot cycle. Using PL is fine, however if it takes a week or so for it to gas off before you can start your tabbing. I prefer to use thickened, reinforced resin to bed stringers and cross members to the hull. A 1/2” gap is fine, most prefer a 1/4” gap to conserve resin. Most will use a pastry piping bag to force the resin under the stringer, then use a tool of your choosing, like a spoon to smooth the resin into nice fillets while it cures. The smooth fillets will help transition the 1708 from stringer to hull as you tab. You always want to fill those gaps under the stringer completely.Thanks for the reply Baylinerchuck,
Do you need to bed the stringers in PB? or PL Premium etc.
I have spent several hours on this site and others trying to find out what is what, concerning the hardiness, and flexibility of PB, and whether you should or need to fill any voids. One person will say PB is softer than wood and a minute later someone is saying it’s harder, I’m thinking in terms of hardspoting in the stringer. In many cases I read, nothing is used and an empty gap is preserved. I ended up cutting all of my stringers yesterday, so that ship has sailed in terms of bedding them in anything, I could cut new ones but I don’t think it is needed, but I don’t have long term experience in this regard.
Although the manufacturers work looks a bit sloppy, it has held up great for 45 years with over 2” gaps in places with no filler. For my current plan, I bought 3 studs to use to suspend the stringers at deck height and tab them in one side at a time; however I am still up in the air about whether I should be using PB to fill the void, either fully, not at all, or enough to encapsulate the stringer for water resistance, as that seemed to be the main point of contention regarding leaving a void.
The stringers I cut were meant to preserve a ½” gap throughout; as I thought that anything more would be overkill. I do understand the science behind very large gaps, in that the larger the gap the wider the force of the load is spread out into the glass. So I guess my concern is would I be creating hard spots by filling the void completely?
I’ve used the rust oleum marine paint with their grip additive and it worked awesome in a Bayliner I restored.You should fill the gaps under your stringers. PB is harder than pine, hands down. It's not a hard vs soft thing. The reason you hear people say to leave a gap is so that you can have room to fill it with a bedding material (PB) and get a consistent contact patch between the stringer and hull. If you tried to cut the stringer to the exact hull shape and not use bedding, you would inevitably have small gaps here and there. Gaps = flexible spots, and flexibility leads to fatigue.
Bedliner is a bad idea. If you want a grippy surface, use a traditional non-skid additive to either marine paint or even better, gelcoat. If it were me, I'd look at SoftSand.
I don't see why there would be much difference, just from the stitching, if they are both the same weight. The amount of resin to saturate should be the same ... or very close. Work-ability also.It wasn’t until I had got into my second batch of 1708 that I noticed how much less resin was required to saturate it, and how it was much easier to work with. Then I took a closer look, and noticed the doubles stitching. I would like to think that the stitching used is fiberglass, but it is more than likely not and likely not adding any structural benefit. After doing layups with the correctly manufactured 1708, I am fairly certain I have wasted about 3 gallons of resin working with the double stitched, ouch more money down the toilet with no conceivable benefit.
I predrilled and countersunk all my holes, then dipped each screw in resin making sure to get a good coat. Used thickened resin to fill all the countersinks, then glassed over the deck.I had a question about how to seal screws that need to go back in the deck, and the screws may be removed at some point. I have silicon and Marine PL, but was wondering if I shouldn’t use anything or maybe there is something better. I have battery trays and panels to reattach and I hate the thought of putting holes in my new deck but it needs to happen, I would just like to make sure I am not allowing any moisture to enter the deck.
I didn't want to put holes in my beautiful sealed deck either, so what I did was make some "pads" out of solid mahogany and PB'd those in place, tabbed them in with 1708, then covered in 1 layer of 1.5 oz CSM, and finally gelcoat. Mahogany is a rot-resistant wood and can take a screw very well. I built them for my trim pump, batteries, and captains chairs. Just make sure to never use a screw longer than the pad thickness, or you'll punch through into the deck below. You can see what I did here.I had a question about how to seal screws that need to go back in the deck, and the screws may be removed at some point. I have silicon and Marine PL, but was wondering if I shouldn’t use anything or maybe there is something better. I have battery trays and panels to reattach and I hate the thought of putting holes in my new deck but it needs to happen, I would just like to make sure I am not allowing any moisture to enter the deck.
I definitely like this idea. I did something similar but I did bolt through the deck. The captain chairs for example. I placed the pedestal bases on an encapsulated plywood disk that was PB’d to the floor. The thought here was that the bolt holes securing the pedestals were higher than the deck, so water wouldn’t penetrate into the deck since the disk was completely sealed. All screw penetrations into the deck were sealed with resin on the threads and countersunk.I didn't want to put holes in my beautiful sealed deck either, so what I did was make some "pads" out of solid mahogany and PB'd those in place, tabbed them in with 1708, then covered in 1 layer of 1.5 oz CSM, and finally gelcoat. Mahogany is a rot-resistant wood and can take a screw very well. I built them for my trim pump, batteries, and captains chairs. Just make sure to never use a screw longer than the pad thickness, or you'll punch through into the deck below. You can see what I did here.