No idea what I'm doing so maybe someone can help a brother out.
Sorry about the long post with dumb questions
This is not a restoration project. It's a 31 year old $2500 boat that I'd be happy getting 5 more years out of.
My plan is to dry fit, seal the wood with the spar/linseed oil/ mineral spirts mix I read about here. No epoxy no fiberglass. Carpet and new seats. Simple easy drinking beer on the water in 2 weeks project. Stringers are solid and intact with no water damage
Questions:
1/2 inch or 3/4 AC sanded one side plywood?
1/2" would work better for me as I need to slide out the back seat assembly to work on the motor and the extra 1/4 inch lip will make a difference (not changing engine area plywood) but I could make 3/4 work
3/4 seems like it will hold the screws better on the back to back seats for obvious reasons
As a contractor I know plywood is 16" on center framing. The center over the gas tank is really wide. When they built the boat they just doubled up on the plywood (in pic) in that area but it has no additional support. They used epoxy and maybe fiberglass over the whole top of the deck which I'm sure strengthened things.
Will double 1/2" plywood in that area be strong enough with no epoxy or glass?
Could I add a couple 30" CCA 2x4's in that area between the stringers flush to the top for more support.?
I know your not supposed to screw through the stringers as that will be a point where water can get in but again old boat that's not going to be around forever
The foam is flush to the top of the stringers in areas, which is therefore touching the bottom of the plywood. It's waterlogged what seems like the top inch. Should I let it air dry and add the plywood or shave it down an inch for some breathing room and to keep it off the new sheathing? It's not totally soaked all the way and it floats just fine. I'm thinking shave it down
Should I seal the perimeter around the hull and seam were the 2 pieces of plywood meet to help keep the water from getting under the plywood? I saw something they were calling " peanut butter" That I think was an epoxy. Could I just smear that around the perimeter for a solid watertight seam and carpet over? Any product recommendations
How to adhere plywood to stringers?
Smear some "peanut butter" on the top of stringers and lay plywood on top with some weights on it?
I have 2 sheets 3/4 sanded one side ply from another project I could use to save some money but it was painted on one side and the edges with 2 coats exterior paint. I'm assuming the seal mix wont help at this point. Should I use it or just by new plywood.
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