Andrei,

If rot is not readily apparent you can always pull a piece of deck hardware and 
check to see how it was mounted. 

Any hardware I've installed on my deck is mounted through holes that I have 
lined with a sleeve of either plastic or metal tubing (I prefer plastic). 
I drill the hole, swab the sides with epoxy then slip the plastic sleeve into 
the hole I also slightly chamfer the gelcoat on the deck to make sure there is 
a small moat that the epoxy can fill around the tubing hole liner. I find this 
process to be a pretty good counter measure for keeping moisture out of the 
balsa core.

After removing a fairlead or clamcleat, and you find the core is soft or damp 
inside the mount hole, you may have a rot problem. 

Fair Winds
Mark Escovedo
M17 Flushdeck
#103
"AMY"


----- Original Message ----
From: Andrei Caldararu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: For and about Montgomery Sailboats <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 5, 2008 11:19:11 AM
Subject: Re: M_Boats: How to tell core rot

Will the leaks also be revealed in stains on the headliner/cabin  
interior? The boat I am interested in has supposedly been very well  
taken care of by its previous owner, and then stored under a good  
quality tarp that covers it all. But it was outside in Utah through  
two winters (=snow).

A.


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