I have an 80 Monark trihull that has a rotted deck. I took the rotted deck out and it resembled mulch and good topsoil. The boat has NO stringers and the fiberglass of the hull is very thin. The original floor system was very rotten, and it was comprised of small pieces of rectangular wood that formed the "bottom" of the boat and that was overlaid with a pretty thin layer of chopped strand to keep it waterproof and then carpet. When I took the stuff up it came out in sections of small wood blocks with what appeared to be a burlap type backing. I have it down to bare fiberglass hull now.
Now I have to give the boat some strength, either by glassing/epoxying in non PT exterior plywood directly in contact with the paper thin thin fiberglass hull, or glassing in non PT exterior plywood and adding stringers. I'm pretty confused as to where the hull strength for this boat came from to begin with. Does the boat even need stringers if it was designed without them? Is the hull designed to flex? Confused.
Thanks! John
Now I have to give the boat some strength, either by glassing/epoxying in non PT exterior plywood directly in contact with the paper thin thin fiberglass hull, or glassing in non PT exterior plywood and adding stringers. I'm pretty confused as to where the hull strength for this boat came from to begin with. Does the boat even need stringers if it was designed without them? Is the hull designed to flex? Confused.
Thanks! John