I am pleased to find that most everyone concurs that the decks are fiberglass without wood core. Frankly, I do not understand why any sailboat decks are ever constructed with the addition of any type of material that would eventually rot.My '82 Mac 25 had some thin plywood under the mast tabernacle.
My 83 Mac 25 had plywood on the decks. It was less than 3/4” but a bit more than 1/2”. It was just marine ply, nothing special.I am pleased to find that most everyone concurs that the decks are fiberglass without wood core. Frankly, I do not understand why any sailboat decks are ever constructed with the addition of any type of material that would eventually rot.
Somewhere in the 80’s the osha and epa regs made the price of fiberglass go up. To use less and keep the boat strong they started to use a core between two thinner layers of fiberglassI am pleased to find that most everyone concurs that the decks are fiberglass without wood core. Frankly, I do not understand why any sailboat decks are ever constructed with the addition of any type of material that would eventually rot.
It is the strength to weight ratio. Decks are mostly flat and horizontal. In order to have them strong enough to not flex under load, like when someone walks on them, they need to be thick and stiff. Adding a balsa, plywood, or foam core builds the thickness at less weight than fiberglass. The core materials are also less expensive.I am pleased to find that most everyone concurs that the decks are fiberglass without wood core. Frankly, I do not understand why any sailboat decks are ever constructed with the addition of any type of material that would eventually rot.
Enjoy.I am pleased to find that most everyone concurs that the decks are fiberglass without wood core.