Thanks Dennis (and Gary and Sam). Let me see where I stand on Tuesday - I may 
be ready to epoxy if I can do the bent nail and acetone thing tomorrow. Let's 
call or text on Tuesday. 

Gary - my chainplate covers are aluminum and still in good shape, just needed a 
really good cleaning (probably 44 years' worth of various sealant jobs built up 
on their undersides). 

Sam - yes my chainplates bolt to fiberglass "knees" tabbed to the hull. And the 
chainplates and knees are in good shape - no sign of weakening from exposure to 
moisture. I just want to make sure I do a proper job of sealing it all up so I 
don't get more coring in the deck going forward. Unfortunately it looks like my 
boat's previous owners didn't do a proper job (e.g. per Don Casey's 
prescriptions) of keeping this area sealed, and a little bit of coring 
occurred. The starboard side was all gooped up with clear silicone, and the 
port side had an ineffective bead of white caulk around the edge of the cover, 
and both sides had hard-as-rock probably original white-colored sealant under 
those other sealants. 

I'll be using polysulfide (Life Caulk) per Don Casey for the re-bedding 
sealant. 

Cheers, 
Randy 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Dennis C. via CnC-List" <[email protected]> 
To: "cnc-list" <[email protected]> 
Cc: "Dennis" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Sunday, January 29, 2017 4:30:09 PM 
Subject: Re: Stus-List Deck Coring Around Chainplates 

Randy, 

You're on the right track. Wish I'd known you were doing that, I would have 
stopped by and taken a peek. I'm back up in the mountains now. 

If it was me, I'd remove the wet core as far back as I could with bent nail, 
etc., dry it with acetone and/or heat gun, tape the area, inject some neat 
epoxy until it was level with the deck, use bent nail to agitate it then 
quickly suck out the epoxy. That will coat the exposed surfaces so the 
thickened epoxy will bond better. Then I'd inject thickened epoxy, let it cure 
and re-install the chalnplates. Don't forget to chamfer the hole so the bedding 
plate doesn't sit down on a square edged cut. 

I'm headed back down to the airport Tuesday afternoon. Got to pick up my ski 
buddies Wednesday morning. I might be able to swing by the dry storage on the 
way. 

Dennis C. 

On Jan 29, 2017 3:48 PM, "RANDY via CnC-List" < [email protected] > wrote: 



Listers- 

We're having a spate of nice weather here in Denver - supposed to be sunny all 
week and 61 degrees tomorrow (yes, in late January / early February). 

So today I pulled the chainplates on my 1972 C&C 30 MK I as part of a planned 
rebedding job (I confirmed leaks down the chainplates last year). Unfortunately 
after removing all old sealant I found some wet and rotten wood core material 
between the outer and inner deck skins around the chainplate cutout holes. 

Now I want to solicit the list's collective wisdom on how to deal with this the 
right way. The lazy approach would be to just reinstall the chainplates and 
inject new sealant all around, including into the void between deck skins where 
rotten core came out, butting up against remaining (and possibly still wet) 
core. 

On the other hand I've read everything Don Casey has to say about cored deck 
repair. I could consider removing core around all sides of the cutout, about a 
half-inch back from each edge, using a bent nail chucked into a power drill. 
Then I could fill those voids with thickened epoxy to the edges of the cutout, 
and then re-bed the chainplates. 

The extreme end of the spectrum would be to try to map out the area of wet core 
e.g. perhaps from the outboard edge of the chainplate cutout all the way to the 
toe rail, then remove and replace the damaged core. However that seems like a 
huge and complicated job, and I don't think the wet area is that large. I 
haven't noticed any softness or squishiness around the chainplates at all, but 
I can percussion-test it carefully. 

In the meantime I'm letting those areas dry out by leaving the chainplates out 
and exposing those areas to the dry Colorado air. I may go pour some acetone in 
those voids too, since Don Casey identifies that as a core-drying technique. 

I'm leaning towards the void-filling approach. What do you think? 

Thanks, 
Randy Stafford 
S/V Grenadine 
C&C 30-1 #7 
Ken Caryl, CO 

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_______________________________________________ 

This list is supported by the generous donations of our members. If you wish to 
make a contribution to offset our costs, please go to: 
https://www.paypal.me/stumurray 

All Contributions are greatly appreciated! 

_______________________________________________

This list is supported by the generous donations of our members. If you wish to 
make a contribution to offset our costs, please go to:  
https://www.paypal.me/stumurray

All Contributions are greatly appreciated!

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