76SeaRay
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2017
- Messages
- 1,071
My new aft stringers are set in place with peanut butter under the full length of each. Corner joints are tabbed in so ready to start tabbing and glassing the stringers. So, here is the issue.
My old stringers have cleat boards running the full length of the stringer for attaching the floor. The stringers are 3/4 inch plywood (exterior originally but new are now marine plywood). The cleat boards measure 1 inch by 1.5 inches so not standard dimensional wood. It looks like they are fir. So two questions;
First, what is the best wood to use for these cleat boards? It seems like using solid wood for these is better than plywood since the screws would likely hold better in solid wood that through the edge of the plywood.
Second, what is the best way to glass these? I am thinking that it might be best to coat the stringer and cleat board with resin, attach the cleat board to the stringer, and then glass over the stringer and cleat board as an assembly. The problem is the number of corners and getting 1708 down tight to the wood as it wraps over the stringer and the cleat boards.


My old stringers have cleat boards running the full length of the stringer for attaching the floor. The stringers are 3/4 inch plywood (exterior originally but new are now marine plywood). The cleat boards measure 1 inch by 1.5 inches so not standard dimensional wood. It looks like they are fir. So two questions;
First, what is the best wood to use for these cleat boards? It seems like using solid wood for these is better than plywood since the screws would likely hold better in solid wood that through the edge of the plywood.
Second, what is the best way to glass these? I am thinking that it might be best to coat the stringer and cleat board with resin, attach the cleat board to the stringer, and then glass over the stringer and cleat board as an assembly. The problem is the number of corners and getting 1708 down tight to the wood as it wraps over the stringer and the cleat boards.

