Best way to fasten bow rails?

nola mike

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My bow rails are treated as olympic grade gym equipment by my guests. They are not. OEM fastened with wood screws through the glass and into who knows what (if anything) beneath. They have ripped out more times than I care to count. Tried repairing holes with glass, epoxy, using embedded machine screws, more wood screws, etc. So finally the ends corroded off. Got new ends with a different screw pattern, so I can go into virgin substrate. The back side is completely inaccessible from the inside. I'm not afraid to make big ugly holes on the topside. It needs through bolting and ideally some kind of backing plate I think, although 3 completely new holes per end (2 before) might be worth trying first? Rivets? Rivnuts? Not sure how thick the current system is, whether there's ply backing, whether that's rotted, etc...
 

Jeff J

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Interesting problem. The issue I see with rivnuts and blind rivets is they are likely to crush fiberglass while being set. They also need to be the correct length so knowing the thickness of the material is kind of critical. Fiberglass isn’t always uniform.

Is the rub rail the mating line for the inner and outer hulls? What size are the original screws?
 

Scott Danforth

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Rivnuts eventually just spin in fiberglass BTDT, have two rivnuts that require someone to reach up underneath with a vicegrip just so I can pull a bolster

got a pic of the location?
Best is an access panel opening (behind a cushion or bolster) and a chunk of aluminum as a backer with tapped holes slather the aluminum with a bit of 5200 to hold it in place while you bolt it in

second best is a chunk of white oak as a backer with wood screws
 

Scott Danforth

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only images I could find spelunking on the web of an early 80s Conroy is this.

1782390865148.png

pull the side bolsters, make a 6" access hole , then a simple patch panel or a deck cover over the hole and replace the side bolster

or put speakers in the 6" hole
 

Jeff J

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“Rivnuts eventually just spin in fiberglass BTDT, have two rivnuts that require someone to reach up underneath with a vicegrip”

I have the exact same experience where they are used in aluminum. Even the rivnuts that have the tabs don’t seem to hold long.
 

nola mike

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Yep, that's my boat. Well, sure Scott, of course I know the correct way to do it ;)
Problem is that in addition to the vertical fiberglass behind the bolsters, is that the whole area is foamed in. I'm guessing there's some sort of a wood backer in between the foam and fiberglass, which I'm also guessing has rotted nicely after 40 years of being enclosed.
As far as the rivnuts--would they hold initially? If i could tighten them down and maybe throw a little loctite on there, if they spun out when trying to remove I wouldnt be in a worse position than I'm in now, right?
1. What about a drywall togglebolt type of solution? Would need something that wouldn't rust in a day.
2. Could also cut 1 or more holes topside, and slip a metal backing plate through the hole, and sandwich with another one. This would be preferable to cutting a hole (probably 4) behind the bolsters and then cursing while trying to remove enough foam to get to the back.

Again, my boat is not what you'd call a trailer queen. Like myself, It's less about looks as I get older and more about just being able to function...
 

airshot

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“Rivnuts eventually just spin in fiberglass BTDT, have two rivnuts that require someone to reach up underneath with a vicegrip”

I have the exact same experience where they are used in aluminum. Even the rivnuts that have the tabs don’t seem to hold long.
When I mounted my tree kickers in my side x side, I used rivnuts and coated the outside with " goop". After it dried they have never come loose even removing the kick bars for cleaning. Mounted them in 2019 and still solid.
 

Scott Danforth

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Yo will need to cut foam away

Riv-nuts don't work in fiberglass
 

Pmt133

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Only other thing I can think of is to plate the area around the end of the rail... effectively making the rail end formers big rail end formers. Wouldn't look great but the load would be very spread out at least.
 
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