I have a 12 foot Eurovinil inflatable that was in need of a new transom. I have made a replica of the old transom. I used good quality plywood, but not marine grade. The question is how to treat it. I am planning to use epoxy to waterproof the transom and finish with two component polyurethane boat paint.
The transom is fairly thick. The main part is 24mm, and the bottom part is 48mm (two pieces of plywood laminated with epoxy).
I started with a fairly thin epoxy solution so it would fill the wood grain properly.
Question 1: Should I use fiberglass cloth on the whole transom, or is it good enough to just use epoxy? I think the transom is strong enough as it is, since the old transom was only treated with laquer.
Question 2: According to the factory, the bottom cloth (the "floor") of the boat is not glued to the transom, but fastened with screws. From what I have understood, there is a piece of plywood that covers the PVC from the "floor" so the PVC is screwed between this plywood and the transom.
I am afraid this will lead to water entering and destroying the transom. Wouldn?t it be better to glue the PVC to the transom?
Any feedback greatly appreciated.
The old transom
The new transom (this side has been treated once with epoxy, but not the thick part at the bottom)
This is how the factory told me the bottom PVC was fastened
The transom is fairly thick. The main part is 24mm, and the bottom part is 48mm (two pieces of plywood laminated with epoxy).
I started with a fairly thin epoxy solution so it would fill the wood grain properly.
Question 1: Should I use fiberglass cloth on the whole transom, or is it good enough to just use epoxy? I think the transom is strong enough as it is, since the old transom was only treated with laquer.
Question 2: According to the factory, the bottom cloth (the "floor") of the boat is not glued to the transom, but fastened with screws. From what I have understood, there is a piece of plywood that covers the PVC from the "floor" so the PVC is screwed between this plywood and the transom.
I am afraid this will lead to water entering and destroying the transom. Wouldn?t it be better to glue the PVC to the transom?
Any feedback greatly appreciated.

The old transom

The new transom (this side has been treated once with epoxy, but not the thick part at the bottom)


This is how the factory told me the bottom PVC was fastened