Fritz
Active Member
Good info on what to expect tackling one of these old gems, thanks for sharing!
The stringers in these boats were not bedded with mastic compounds. They were dropped right on the hull and for reasons that were pioneered by Bertram and Hourston in FRP construction on runabouts.December 27, 2021 - short video just checking out my stringers. They were not bedded in place.
Okay,
If you cream a dead head with your hull at 30 + mph something has to budge. The way they engineered this was from the data they collected with composite structures during WW2, a lot from the PT Boats.
The way it works is almost as if a micro pocket is formed under the stringer. Instead of your active stringer acting like “hard spot” in the hull and busting the fibreglass open adjacent to it, the micro-pocket compresses and allows the laminate to flex on the tapered tabbing. As we know tapered structures dissipate stresses well.
Bedding in Sikaflex, PL (Not a fan), 3M 5200 or West systems epoxy is totally fine, because they flex. If you are leaving some of the original tabbing to act as a channel to drop the stringer in I would recommend using sikaflex (just my opinion). If you burn off the old laminate right down to the hull then use west systems method they outline in their repair manual, because as it was mentioned earlier the fibreglass resins don’t like to stick to polyurethane sealant adhesives and you’ll have a bugger trying to do your fillets.
These are just recommendations. My biggest recommendation is to read the product information guides and fiberglass repair literature and make your own decisions.
I also hope nobody out there in TV land thinks I’m trying to steer anyone from using modern materials. Just be aware of the drastic changes required in your laminate schedules.
Things are only as strong as what you attach them to. If you overbuild something it merely becomes an anvil for breaking the rest of the structure over.
Seriously everyone, enjoy your projects