Hmmm on the deck floor thing I kind of thought mine had both.
My deck is shot but the floor underneath (the foam surface) seems fine.
how do I tell if its water logged?
I noticed the floor was uneven. ie some "sections" are higher than others. (this appears to have been intentional ie its MOLDED this way.
its a 1974 Larson 186
Replacing the deck for "function" is extremely easy. I just dropped in 2 chunks of plywood. Done. cost me $28
Over the winter I intended to get rid of the ply.
The "wood" based interlaced in the foam (I assume to support the deck?) is shot. I am hoping to find some scrap aluminum to replace that. I want to use some expanding foam (can you get this in a sealed variety instead of open cell?) to "level" the floor so its even from to back.
then I am going to build a simple lumber "deck" ontop of the floor. I plan to have cross members every 12 inches and then run lumber bow to stern to great a nice pretty real "deck"
except for "slots" to keep things rigid I plan to have no actual attachment of the deck to the floor. this way I can remove the entire deck as one piece from the boat and repair replace lateral supports as needed and decking as needed each winter if need be.
I plan to use regular old cheap lumber like you would use in a house at first. I can fine tune the design and maintenance will be ultra cheap.
As I get more money and if I decide to keep the boat I will use better lumber.
What kinds of wood are good for water and rot resistance? I know teak but I can afford an entire teak floor in a 19ft boat

hehe
for now.
I tossed in some cheap 3/4 home depot ply and am just enjoying the boat. Slipped a damned hub so have to replace that to get back on the water again.