jfm
Well-Known Member
As you wish - I give up and if you want to believe it is laminate or veneer then do so.There's two newish ,less than 2 y olds boats side by side near me .
One is a Targa 48 ,t,other a Prinny v48 .
Without naming names one has allready exactly what I describes in a heavey trafficked area on the B platform .
It looks like guardiene has no Passerelle fob and jumps on foot stricking the same place. Dodging the stern springs .
The black caulk has worn away across 2-3 lines., which look like a solid mass of wood now .
So I reckon it's a template of sheet ,routered to say 1/2 way ( guess..?) and back filled with caulking
I,ll try to take some pics next time .,to illustrate this and some corner pieces to check the grain direction of both boats .
It would make a good post .iam ambivalent I like teak and the subject with real life pics of these two and a few others old and new will be a great topic .
It's just that if they were all seperate pieces /strips as you suggest ,then the caulk would run down all the way ,not 1/2 ,and that would wear evenly ok thinner but you would still see the black lines .
So why have the black lines -caulking disappeared on the landing area of the B platform on a del in 2015 boat from one f our big 3 ?
The caulk does indeed not go the full depth. You can't* make teak deck sheeting efficiently if the caulking is taken through the full depth. Rebating one edge of each plank to about 2/3rds of the plank's thickness, as Nick H describes in detail above, is the smart way to make these decks and that is what the manufacturers (like Wattsons, kjhowells, Moodys) do, but that does not mean they are laminate or veneer.
*Well you can, if you make all the forward planks straight, rather than curving them into a king plank. Fortunately not too many builders use the cheap trick of keeping the planks straight, and the UK big 3 don't, but Itama are one of the bad guys in this regard: if you spec a teak deck they install awful straight planked foredecks urgh.