More Details
In response to Rick's request for more details:1. My stern crack appeared simmilar to the cracks in Conn's pictures, but they were just along the bottom of the boat - about 3 ft long. Note that I did this work in the spring, at least 4 months after it was pulled out of the water, and there was still water in the laminate.2. I dug into the foam until I reached good foam - about 5-6" in. I did not pry anything apart, just dug into the space between the fiberglass, about 1/4" to 3/8". A bicycle spoke works great.3. From there, it was std fiberglass work. I roughened up the inside surfaces with 60-100 grit sandpaper. Cleaned it with MEK or Acetone. Used a hair dryer to dry thoroughly. Used some thickened West Systems epoxy (I used a chopped glass to thicken, you can also use the std West Systems thickener). I just pushed this fiberglass "goo" into the void I created and taped over it so it would not migrate back out.4. Then it was standard gel coat work. I got some gel coat from Hunter (the HazMat shipping charges are killer!). Gel coat is like a 2-part thick paint. It can be sanded and polished to make it shine, but to minimize all of that hard labor, you can tape pces of saran wrap over the area you are gel coating. This smooths and contours the gel coat and minimizes any sanding and polishing.5. Look in the SailNet archives for lots of articles on fiberglass and gel coat repairs. Also - West Systems has a great book for basic fiberglass repair available from their Web site. I've seen them from no cost to about $3.Brad