I'm going to guess that he pre-drilled oversized holes in the plywood, in the same location that the original holes were..........Dumb question. How did you remove marine grade plywood core so that you can seal the core with epoxy plugs? A bent nail aint' gonna get it, you have to provide compression plugs (plywood is not enough), and you need to keep the water out.
Yes - I marked and pre-drilled all of the deck penetrations in the plywood and balsa core and filled with thickened epoxy prior to laying the glass. @thinwater if you look at post #15 in this thread you can see the holes in the plywood prior to filling. I think the following post shows them after being filled.I'm going to guess that he pre-drilled oversized holes in the plywood, in the same location that the original holes were..........
I found my side decks to be much thinner on the top skin than the bottom when I removed my water fill fittings to rebed them. Did you find the same on the 34? A re-core job like this is likely in my future so thanks for sharing.

I thought you indicated in post 29 that the holes did not line up, and that you discovered this after the laminate was in. I did not read carefully. My bad.@thinwater - Not sure I understand your questions exactly? I won't be removing any plywood core - I predrilled all of the holes where the fasteners will go oversize ahead of time and they are filled with thickened epoxy - you can see the filled holes in the plywood that are for the genoa track. I also overdrilled the chain plate holes and the deck fill holes to provide an epoxy barrier.
When you say "keyed in" what do you mean? I will be grinding a 1 1/2" wide bevel in the existing non-skid margin I left, and laminating in three layers of 1708 - each layer 1/2" larger than the previous as they fill the ground out bevels. Posts #18 and 19 in this thread show the bevels on the port side before and after laminating.