PaulJS
Well-Known Member
As a marine engineer I have only worked on steel hulled vessels, and as a novice sailor I only have experience of a plywood dinghy (Admittedly patched with glass-fibre!), but I've just seen another thread about the "dreaded osmosis"...
So can anyone explain what the consequences of leaving osmosis in glass-fibre hulls untreated would be. Would the hull suffer from structural degradation or would it start leaking? Could osmosis leave the laminate subject to the possibility of catastrophic failure, or would it be a more gradual damage?
Basically my question is can osmosis seriously harm a yacht, or is it more a cosmetic issue? If it is a symptom of the layers delaminating I appreciate that it could be harmful, but if it is localised damage with only pinpoints of damage surely it is relatively unimportant.
Any advice from more experienced forumites would be worth reading.
So can anyone explain what the consequences of leaving osmosis in glass-fibre hulls untreated would be. Would the hull suffer from structural degradation or would it start leaking? Could osmosis leave the laminate subject to the possibility of catastrophic failure, or would it be a more gradual damage?
Basically my question is can osmosis seriously harm a yacht, or is it more a cosmetic issue? If it is a symptom of the layers delaminating I appreciate that it could be harmful, but if it is localised damage with only pinpoints of damage surely it is relatively unimportant.
Any advice from more experienced forumites would be worth reading.
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