Re: How would you recommend starting stringer Replacement
Re: How would you recommend starting stringer Replacement
Hmmm, it is much different then I envisioned...
Those thru transom drains from inside the splashwell to the back of the transom, the aluminum tubes, will also need to be removed. They are available in a few materials, but that is for later, you can use a jab saw or a hacksaw blade to carefully cut them into 2 or 3pcs & gently pry them out (they may beglued into the hole) to minimize damage to the fiberglass skin on either end of the tube.
Based on the pix showing the cap-hull joint at the splashwell, it looks like there may have already been repair/patch work done at some point. Pix #2 & 3 in your post #13. Or at least some sort of sealant (silicone) has been applied to the rubrail & trim in the splashwell areas....
Looking back at post #1, the transom shot looks like it hasn't been redone, or at least not to me.
Since based on the early pix, we know you have stringer & deck rot, and you've already started the process, I would start at 2+/-" from the edge of any of the fiberglass gunwale that is attached vertically at all edges of your deck, along this red line:
Leaving the vertical interior gunwale attached to the cap.
Follow that line all the way around the bottom of the gunwale, deck joint.. You can always trim more out, but if you don't have to don't, for now. You will be close to the hull on the back side of this cut, avoid making more work for yourself, but it too can be filled/fixed. Many of us start our put back with the thru hull/cap slices.
It looks more like your boat was built in just 2 pcs: hull & the cap that had tan integral deck & interior gunwales. When they installed the cap, the interior was already substantially complete.
Before you remove cut more, and definitely before you remove the cap, build a cradle that follows the hull along the keel from the beginning of the bow to the transom, left & right under the boat and in a few locations vertically up to the rubrail. Cover the cradle with carpet or carpet pad scraps. Building it before you remove the cap, will hopefully minimize distortion. You might try to sight down the hull in several places & confirm that it isn't distorted prior to building your cradle.
With a cap & integral interior, the only way to accurately measure the interior hull/cap joint distance, is to cut an inspection hole at each point you want to measure, on both sides of the boat. That's a lot of holes, I measured every 16" transom to bow in mine. With a cradle under the boat, hopefully it won't move around much & you can check the distances after you remove the cap. And regularly re-check that distance.
Before you do any of that ^^^, I strongly suggest you attempt to find some similar F&S resto's and read those threads & many more. Esp those in
Don's how to thread. I don't even play a glass repair expert on TV....
This ^^^ is all based on my best guess of a 'good' way to proceed from here, on your particular boat & current situation as I understand it. There maybe (& probably are) other ways.
You just posted again while I wrote this, I'll check that & come back..