quote:
Originally posted by thataway4
Assuming that this is an open cockpit boat, you will just cut out the old deck--(which most likely had a plywood core) and put in a new deck. I recently purchased a boat only 4 years old, with 120 hours on the engine, and 3 seasons of use, but had been stored in New York, without being shrink wraped. Water had stood in the cockpit and the balsa core was not sealed at the edges of the deck hatches, nor was the glass (one layer of mat). A person had jumped on the deck and cracked it. We cut out the bad balsa core, and used Nidacore (a poly prop hexacell, with glass mat on top and bottom, which is impervious to rot)to replace the bad part of the deck. We used a shall blade (3 1/4" diameter)carbide circular saw to cut thru the top layer of glass and the core, but left the roving and mat on the bottom.
If I were doing the deck replacement with plywood, I would use marine plywood, saturated edges and any cuts with epoxy. Put a layer of biaxial 12 oz or 18oz cloth over the top with epoxy, fair and roll on a non skid. Use cloth to tab into the hull sides and any bulkheads. Not all that big a job, IF there is not more damage below the deck. But there is a fairly good chance that stringers are damaged also, so that complicates the job, and they should be replaced at the same time.
What size and type of boat is this?