Martin,  Where did you get the epoxy board?  

Mike 
Virginia Lee 
1978 C&C 36 CB
Virginia Beach

Sent from my iPad Mini

> On May 3, 2014, at 9:01, Martin DeYoung via CnC-List <cnc-list@cnc-list.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> Calypso’s new backing plates (replacing 43 year old aluminum) are 2 layers of 
> .030 epoxy board with a thick layer of glass cloth and epoxy in the middle.  
> They sand and paint like fiberglass and will not corrode.  We are filling and 
> back drilling the hardware mounting holes so the risk of crushing the deck 
> core is limited and the backing plates are a back-up.
>  
> We used .030 GR4 epoxy board because the company I work at had a bunch left 
> over from a project and I was able to requisition it.  The mid layer of glass 
> cloth is an easy way to add thickness and strength.  We are able to make 
> custom shapes and thicknesses.  We shape the edges much like Dennis describes 
> below.
>  
> Martin
> Calypso
> 1971 C&C 43
> Seattle
>  
> From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Dennis C. 
> via CnC-List
> Sent: Friday, May 02, 2014 3:12 PM
> To: CnClist
> Subject: Stus-List Making a winch backing plate
>  
> Just thought I'd share my current project.
> 
> I'm repairing a boat with a ripped off cabin top winch.  The winch was 
> mounted on a pad molded in the deck.  Molded in the deck under the pad was an 
> aluminum disc.  The winch fasteners were tapped into the disc.  The cabin 
> liner was immediately under that.  The winch, pad and disc all separated from 
> the deck.
> 
> Since there was no access to the underside of the pad, there was no easy way 
> to get beneath the pad and add structure for strength.  The plan was to clean 
> up the pad, re-attach it with epoxy.  Simply epoxying the pad down would have 
> very little strength so the winch needs to be through bolted.  (Of course a 
> minor gelcoat repair is required to cosmetically finish the pad.)
> 
> Since the backing plate will be visible from the cabin, it needs to be nice.
>  
> Anyway, I ordered a couple of pieces of 1/4 inch aluminum plate on eBay.  
> (You can find cut scraps fairly cheap there.)  I used my Bosch jigsaw with a 
> metal cutting blade to size the pad and rough trim the corners.  Then I 
> shaped the corners with a belt sander with 80 grit and then finished all the 
> edges with the belt sander and 120 grit.  The edges were hand sanded with 320 
> grit.  The exposed flat surface was hand sanded with 1000 grit wet/dry then 
> polished with a buffing wheel and polishing compound.  Looks nice!!
> 
> Whole process took about 30-40 minutes.  The winch will be re-installed with 
> washers, lock washers and cap nuts for a nice finished look.
> 
> Dennis C.
> Touche' 35-1 #83
> Mandeville, LA
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