Rob & Karen
New member
There is coring in the horizontal portion of the v-berth. I have a cutout section in my garage. The vertical sections underneath are solid fiberglass.
Rob
Rob
Sunbeam":2szfrx1b said:On the strength: I have cut similar side openings into fiberglass "furniture," and what I did was epoxy a frame-like reinforcement around the inside of the opening. Sort of like framing a door or window in a way. After I cut the opening, I reached in and epoxy-glued and clamped the new pieces in place. If your new hatch is the flush panel/turnbutton type, the frame can double as the "stopper cleats" that keep the panel from falling into the locker (often with the lower cleat attached to the panel which you set into place first and then let the other three sides fit up to the cleats).
Sunbeam
colbysmith":3ldssx8x said:I was just using a regular blade, mostly for wood. I know the abrasive blade style you are talking about, and while I have some that fit my Sawzall, I didn't have any for my jig saw. I had thought about using my rotozip tool, but felt the bit would have taken more material, making the cutout a little loose to reuse as a cover then.
colbysmith said:I think instead of expensive epoxy, I will use some of that special paint made to use on brick walls in basements to seal the seepage of water or moisture. Perhaps it's similar to what you mentioned earlier.
I can't think what paint I might have mentioned, so maybe that was someone else. Or in another context? (I would definitely use epoxy.)
Sunbeam
colbysmith":2hwr09xc said:Is this what others have seen when they remove the foam in the forward hull? That the coring seams to stop where it does in my 2007.