That was exactly my thinking when I chose it -- the stuff comes in various 
thicknesses (we have a marine salvage place here that sells pieces for a buck 
or two).  You can select a thickness that will adapt and curve to the contours 
of the interior laminate surface.   Star Board  is not a good material to bond 
to most caulks or sealants, but figured that the sealants would have plenty of 
other surfaces (hardware surfaces, bolts, glass deck laminates and epoxy 
filler) to bond to and seal the exterior deck.  The interior laminate surface 
is a bit irregular in addition to being curved.  I put a generous amount of 
sealant between the backing plate and the interior laminate surface to fill any 
voids.  The sealant in that area will bond to the interior laminate surface and 
complete the weather/water seal.

Choice of epoxy or polyester resins to fill the deck voids can be confusing.  
They all work, but epoxy is the best.  If you use polyester resin, be sure ALL 
moisture has had a chance to dry from the damaged balsa core deck interior.  
Moisture will retard/stop the polyester setting process and you will end up 
with a mess.

Second the happy Turkey Day wishes.

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Dick,
Excellent idea to use the 'Starboard' for backing plates! No hard edges to  
collapse or damage the underside of the laminate. Great application.
GaryO.
M-17 #316a
 



**************************************Check out AOL's list of 2007's hottest 
products.
(http://money.aol.com/special/hot-products-2007?NCID=aoltop00030000000001)
_______________________________________________
http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats


       
---------------------------------
Never miss a thing.   Make Yahoo your homepage.
_______________________________________________
http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/montgomery_boats

Reply via email to