[Public-list] Cockpit coamings.
Jonathan Whittingham
whittle at shaw.ca
Sun Dec 18 18:23:20 PST 2005
George Dinwiddie wrote:
> Jonathan Whittingham wrote:
>
>> 1. The coamings are attached with bolts that "disappear" into the
>> space bewtween the deck and the underside of the locker. There
>> appears to be a cavity in there that now has the nut that must have
>> dropped off when I unscrewed the bolt. Hmmm! What recomendations for
>> re-attachement? I am thinking about drilling say a one inch hole from
>> below into that cavity right where the horizontal hole will be to
>> pull the new boards into place, so that I can slip a washer and nut
>> in there.
>
>
> I'm not sure what cavity you mean. On Calypso, #543, the nuts are
> mostly accessible by reaching up inside the locker. There are a few
> that were embedded in the layup, but not in a cavity.
Well. George, trust me on this one. It would appear that there is
indeed a second layup from the hull to the topside of the cockpit sides,
thus creating a cavity and my lost nuts.
>
>> 2. I am considering rebuilding the coamings out of marine grade
>> plywood and fibreglassing them before installing them. Aside from
>> possible aesthetic protests from the purist faction, what opinions
>> about this method? Any other suggestions.
>
>
> Having used glassed plywood to make some El Toro rudders, I think
> you'll find that much more work than doing the job right with a
> board. If the cost of teak or mahogany is what's giving you pause, I
> would fall back on "Chesapeake Teak" (pressure treated yellow pine)
> before plywood. You might also find that you can rejuvenate the
> original coamings with a little ingenuity.
Actually, after seeing the splits I have concludede that
plywood, whilst I agree the extra work is, well, extra, that the plywood
will be a whole lot stronger as long as it retains water repulsion.
However what kind of Mahogany are you proposing? On theWest Coast
purpleheart is gaining some popularity as a replacement for teak. I am
told that it wears the elements just about as well, probably better than
Mahogany and costs a fraction of teak. Regards Jonathan
>
> - George
>
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