Brian,Thanks for the tip on the polypropylene core, Caleb. I was going to use balsa, not plywood, per the original design. It sounds like this stuff will be cheaper, and less likely to rot - it's hard to argue with that! And my complements to your recore job. I only wish I had 3-4 days to just work on it. As it is, I get about 2 hours, once a week. I spend about 15-20 minutes of that just setting up and wrapping up. The plus is that I am working on a trailer in my driveway. How was it working on the water? I don't know if I would have even attempted that.
I came very close to using Balsa core again on my boat as the original Balsa core had lasted 45 years. I ended up chosing the polypropylene honeycomb core because it was about the same price as plywood and because it was not wood and I'm not disappointed.
I bought a 4' x 8' sheet of the 1/2" core (thinking I would do both port & stbd decks this season, ha!) and I have a bunch of scrap material hanging around. I'd be happy to send you a scrap so you could see it up close; send me a private message if so.
Working on the boat while at the finger pier as we did was not ideal but preferable to doing it at our mooring. Two of us worked on our port deck re-core for nearly 3 full afternoons and it was a little gruesome. Waiting for the last coat of epoxy to "kick" added a good amount of time to our project.
I still have some more epoxy-ing, sanding and painting to do to make the deck pretty again so that is another (at least) 2 more days. I haven't posted any pictures (yet) of our Frankenstein port deck. Your core areas that need replacing are fairly small so hopefully it wont take you nearly as long.
