I am looking into redoing the deck in my 1995 14' Bayliner Capri. I have inspected as much as I possibly could without tearing any of the floor up. I have looked into the process of redoing stringers, bulkheads and foam and it is just too much for me to take on. Upon my inspection, I see that my stringers are encased in fiberglass. They seem solid except for about a foot or so back behind the bilge on one side. The floor is de-laminating in several places and cracked in about two to three places. I have researched materials, and with such a small deck it seems very affordable. $50-70 each for 1 or 2 sheets of marine plywood, $5 sq ft fiberglass sheets, $30 for a can of resin and $100 for enough brand new carpet to put back. I'm thinking $200-$400 to redo the deck, resin, glass and re carpet that area. Does this sound right at all?
Also, I have attached some pics showing what might be an issue for me. The issue would be removing the seat bases which are rotted. my plan was to cut 1 inch inwards along the edge of the deck, make traces of the bad pieces onto the new plywood and put back. In the seat base photo you can see that there is a piece going along the edge of the base up against the gunwales that are glassed on. I am not sure how to work around this. Also, I am guessing that the seat bases are just built on top of the deck?? Can anyone tell me how I can do this deck the easiest way possible. I would ideally, like to just build new bases on top the deck after re-carpeting.
Finally, if the stringers are bad here is what I would like some input on. If they are badly rotted, I am junking the boat. I am in no way taking that project on with my limited skills and time. I really like this boat and want to keep it. I think drilling out holes and injecting epoxy would be very doable for me if that would help. I am not looking to have this deck last me 30 years. I would like a solid deck and boat to last me 5 or 6 years. 10 years would be great! So, with that said, is just the deck repair on possible partially rotted stringers (with solid fiberglass shells) good enough to get me here? Thanks!
Also, I have attached some pics showing what might be an issue for me. The issue would be removing the seat bases which are rotted. my plan was to cut 1 inch inwards along the edge of the deck, make traces of the bad pieces onto the new plywood and put back. In the seat base photo you can see that there is a piece going along the edge of the base up against the gunwales that are glassed on. I am not sure how to work around this. Also, I am guessing that the seat bases are just built on top of the deck?? Can anyone tell me how I can do this deck the easiest way possible. I would ideally, like to just build new bases on top the deck after re-carpeting.
Finally, if the stringers are bad here is what I would like some input on. If they are badly rotted, I am junking the boat. I am in no way taking that project on with my limited skills and time. I really like this boat and want to keep it. I think drilling out holes and injecting epoxy would be very doable for me if that would help. I am not looking to have this deck last me 30 years. I would like a solid deck and boat to last me 5 or 6 years. 10 years would be great! So, with that said, is just the deck repair on possible partially rotted stringers (with solid fiberglass shells) good enough to get me here? Thanks!