Petercatterall
Well-Known Member
I am repairing the teak decks on my 32 Atlanta. I have been able to simply re-seal the side decks but have to strip off the foredeck as the plywood sub deck is too far gone.
I am working out of doors so have to work within weather windows. I have considered a'tent' but am concerned that the Ardrossan gales would rip it off!!
I propose to replace the Plywood and seal it by wetting out then epoxying,I will then have a waterproof deck.
The difficult bit then follows( for shear practicality I would forget the teak but I feel that I must preserve the classic looks) .. My problem concerns fastening the teak to the epoxyied plywood. The reclaimed strips were screwed so there is an immediate problem with the existing holes and as I would be perforating the nice sealed plywood with 500 screw holes. I could use glue or epoxy but will these adhere to the epoxied ply?
how would I hold the strips down untill the glue dried?
The teak has been sanded over the years and is now about 3/8 thick, enough for wear but many of the screw holes are now insufficiently deep to take a teak plug on top of the screw. I wonder if I can counter sink them further but am concerned that there is insufficient wood for this.
One idea is to use a glue and just use a few screws to hold them while the glue sets, I could increase the countersunk depth on the other holes and use plugs to seal them off.
I guess that my questions concern recommendations about glue to epoxied surfaces and if 3/8s teak strips will take screws and have sufficient depth remaining for plugs, is ther a tool which would help give a well controlled counter sunk hole? also what glue for the plugs, epoxy or what?
I am trying you classic boat guys as I am sure ther will be a million experts happy to help on this!!
I am working out of doors so have to work within weather windows. I have considered a'tent' but am concerned that the Ardrossan gales would rip it off!!
I propose to replace the Plywood and seal it by wetting out then epoxying,I will then have a waterproof deck.
The difficult bit then follows( for shear practicality I would forget the teak but I feel that I must preserve the classic looks) .. My problem concerns fastening the teak to the epoxyied plywood. The reclaimed strips were screwed so there is an immediate problem with the existing holes and as I would be perforating the nice sealed plywood with 500 screw holes. I could use glue or epoxy but will these adhere to the epoxied ply?
how would I hold the strips down untill the glue dried?
The teak has been sanded over the years and is now about 3/8 thick, enough for wear but many of the screw holes are now insufficiently deep to take a teak plug on top of the screw. I wonder if I can counter sink them further but am concerned that there is insufficient wood for this.
One idea is to use a glue and just use a few screws to hold them while the glue sets, I could increase the countersunk depth on the other holes and use plugs to seal them off.
I guess that my questions concern recommendations about glue to epoxied surfaces and if 3/8s teak strips will take screws and have sufficient depth remaining for plugs, is ther a tool which would help give a well controlled counter sunk hole? also what glue for the plugs, epoxy or what?
I am trying you classic boat guys as I am sure ther will be a million experts happy to help on this!!