zool
Captain
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2012
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Hey Larry, I thought You would use one of those East Coast Plywood Stretchers!!!!
ha!...after lifting that thing in there, I thought they were gonna put me on a "stretcher"
Hey Larry, I thought You would use one of those East Coast Plywood Stretchers!!!!
This is my pole barn on property but it's un-insulated.
Yea, access is worst than my Sun Sport. Probably will be going in with several pieces.
Do you want to check the bulkhead :noidea:
The 2" thickness includes the inner and outer glass?..or just the wood core?..
Use your multi tool to cut a 1" grid pattern in the wood. You'll be surprised how easy it will chip off the glass then. If the stringers have rot, I'd cut the sides in order to inspect to discover the extent and then be able to determine the best course of action.
Bummer that the rot did not stop before the stringer. The next outboard stringer will hopefully be a stopping point. Those mounting boxes just outside of the engine stringers won't be too hard to rebuild . . . and taking them out may give you a good look at the engine stringer core :thumb:
What a lot of work, I'm beat.
I have felt your pain . . . Looks like you are moving along just fine. Were the stringers glassed on both sides . . . or did you expose some of it when you removed the 'box'?
I think it took me a few days of work to cut out the bulkhead on my 330SS (and I only did the center section). Got to a point where I felt I could shave with the sawzall, since I had used it so much.
BTW - what is that number sign (1107814) attached to the transom all about?
The 10% readings are pretty good for encapsulated wood. You could drill some test holes at the width of the meter probes to do some testing elsewhere on the transom without having to 'skin' it first. In my experience using that same meter . . . 10% is fairly dry . . . 30% is moist . . . 40%+ is soaking wet.
Probably could take a reading on the stringers and bulkhead too . . . or would that be pushing your luck :noidea: