I just saw yesterday that my stbd chain plate bulkhead failed (again). The first time, the plywood had rotted out; the chain plate and cover had never been sealed properly and water intrusion killed the wood. I had to repair it on the water, by using the main halyard to serve as the stbd stay temporarily. Used butyl tape to seal and this has seemed to work well. I could not find any marine plywood, thus used poplar instead, epoxying and tabbing it into the hull. Use of poplar was a mistake, as the bulkhead (probably yesterday while sailing) split, so the chain plate bolts pulled part of the wood up against the deck liner ceiling. No more sailing this season; we have to pull our boats in about 3 or 4 weeks anyway as the lake is being lowered more than normal for maintenance of the dam and the level will end up too low to use the launch ramps.
So - what was actually used by Hunter - marine plywood? Or regular exterior grade ply? I doubt anyone (even this site) sells a shaped bulkhead as a part. Does anyone know if Hunter has templates for the shape - I can use the remnants of what I remove, but that is a pain as you have to do a lot of damage to the wood to grind it away from the hull. I intend to seal all the edges of the piece with epoxy in any case, so water can not soak in the end grain. Since I will have more time this go around, I will buy some biaxial glass tape for the tabbing, rather than the "standard" tape I had used. How many layers of glass cloth are needed to tab it properly?
Not looking forward to this - grinding out the broken bulkhead and remnants of epoxy (without making the hull thinner) and then doing the glassing is a messy job.
So - what was actually used by Hunter - marine plywood? Or regular exterior grade ply? I doubt anyone (even this site) sells a shaped bulkhead as a part. Does anyone know if Hunter has templates for the shape - I can use the remnants of what I remove, but that is a pain as you have to do a lot of damage to the wood to grind it away from the hull. I intend to seal all the edges of the piece with epoxy in any case, so water can not soak in the end grain. Since I will have more time this go around, I will buy some biaxial glass tape for the tabbing, rather than the "standard" tape I had used. How many layers of glass cloth are needed to tab it properly?
Not looking forward to this - grinding out the broken bulkhead and remnants of epoxy (without making the hull thinner) and then doing the glassing is a messy job.