Cleat backing plates
I have a 1991 P42, and there were no backing plates on the cleats or under the bow roller. I spoke to Hunter about that, and they opined that backing plates were unnecessary since the bolts went through the aluminum toerail. However, that didn't stop the nuts and fender washers from digging into the fiberglass under the toerail. I also questioned the strength of the cleats under a very large load.It was a very simple matter to buy some 3/16" thick stainless steel bars and put them under the aluminum toerails for backing plates (including the midship cleats I added by grinding down the vertical portion of the toerail and drilling through the aluminum). I also had a machine shop make me a trapezoidal piece to backplate the bow roller. Never had any problems, and I have had huge loads on the bow roller and the bow cleats.The stanchions, which are screwed into plates glassed into the deck, are very strong. I once had to pull up to a commercial dock to clear foreign customs, and pulled up to those huge 6' diameter black horizontal "fenders" made for freighters. Large swells forced my lifelines and stanchions under the "fender", and the force bent the stanchions. None of the stanchions pulled out of their deck attachments, and those connection points continue to be stong. (Although I had to cut off the top of one stanchion and drill a new hole for the lifeline.