As per Don Casey, silicone is a gasket material, not a glue, so you have to install it in a way that will ensure enough material is present, and that it's under mechanical compression. It's not wise to rely on the silicone bond for any mechanical strength.
And Don has given some questionable advice over the years, namely his "make a gasket tighten twice" method of bedding and his statements about all silicone needing fasteners are just not true and you don't have to look far to see this...
Silicone can be a structural adhesive and is in use world wide across many industries as such. There are many grades of silicone so to lump them all together is also poor judgment on Don's part.
Silicone holds windows in sky scrapers and products like Dow 795 or GE SilPruf are holding millions of port lights onto boats and hatch lenses into hatch frames, on boats throughout the world using no fasteners.
Perhaps Don should do better research before making factual statements in books read by boaters and believed as gospel. It is not always true that silicone can not be used as a glue to hold prouducts such as ports and lenses to boats. Lewmar, Bomar, Hunter, Catalina, Adkins & Hoyle, Goiot and builders like Beneteau, Hunter and Catalina to name a few all use silicone to hold products together with no fasteners..
Last spring when I remounted our side windows using silicone, I used toothpicks to space out the window from the hull about 1/16" and just snugged up the screws to the toothpicks. After letting the silicone cure for a few days, I removed the toothpicks and tightened all the hardware to clamp down on the silicone "gasket".
And more often than not this Don Casey method results in leaks around screws that turned after the sealant cured.This creates a great path for water to leak around the screws. Most marine plastics experts strongly advise against the use of screws in acrylic port lights. Tony D'Andrea, who is the Nigel Calder of marine plastics, strongly cautions against this.
It's no problem to use the screws until cured but he advises to remove them once cured and to fill the holes with the silicone used. These plastics expand and contract at a greater degree than the GRP and can cause the ports to crack at the screw holes unless the holes are made considerably bigger than the screw wire size to accommodate movement. In small short ports this may not be an issue but the longer the port light the more expansion/contraction along its length.