Still don't have all the answers
I queried the group here last year on the issue of water seeping up from stress cracks and the screw holes for the pump switch on my 85 H34. I presumed after a lot of deduction that there was a void beneath the allegedely false bilge and above the real hull interior. Last weekend with the boat on the cradle, I did some exploratory surgery with my dremel tool. I still don't know what lies beneath, but I do have more facts to share:The surface of the allegedely false bilge is about 1/2" of solid fiberglass, then there is a void filled with waterand a piece of 1/2" plywood of some kind. beneath the plywood is...some form of bare metal plate-possibly the actual keel, though it is not rusted as one would expect if a bare iron keel had been bathed for months/years in water.I'm still puzzled as to whether this is some kind of plate that sandwiches the actual hull and keel or the keel itself. It it is the keel, then the hull is incredibly thin here, and any screws holding the bilge pump/switch would almost certainly penetrate the hull.Also, I can't understand the void and the use of plywood.The exterior hull shows a nice tight fit around the canoe body at the keel/hull joint. No seeping water here...and no edge of the plywood which seemed to be floating loose in the void by the way.Naturally, if water is trapped in this void and freezes it will damage the bilge structure above it-hence the stress cracks...So, I don't think we have the full answer yet, else Mr. Emerson would have mentioned more about the void and the plywood right?Unless I can find some better answers, my plan is to fill the screw holes with epoxy, and remat/glass the inside of the false bilge, and find some alternative to screwing anything into the thin base which may in fact be the real bilge base. No clue how I could ever dry this out before sealing it off since there seems to be no large recesses for air circulation to dry it. Next winter it will just freeze and expand again causing more damage.I've heard that one should avoid dropping the keel on these boats "at all costs"...I'd love to hear from someone who actually had something to do with building this vintage hull, or someone who has seen a full section perhaps as a result of a complete rebuild, etc.